Report: Individuals with associated notes

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Matches 1201 to 1478 of 1478   » All Reports

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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
1201 I59  Smith  Esmerelda Eramantha  10 Dec 1857  9 Mar 1895  Esmerelda lived in Sonoma, California her entire life and was buried in mountain cemetery, Sonoma, California. 
1202 I9142  Smith  Henry  1593  9 Aug 1648  He studied at Kings College in Cambridge, England in 1619-1620, and was ordained by the Bishop of Peterborough on June 8, 1623. Henry came with his wife, four children, four men servants, and four maid servants on a ship with John Driver, master, sailing from Weymouth, England in 1636. They settled first in Watertown, Mass., and in March of 1636, Rev. Smith and six other men were appointed commissioners, giving them full power by the Massachusetts legislature to govern Connecticut for one year. On December 5, 1637, Henry and his wife were admitted to communion at the Watertown Church.

In 1638, the family removed to Wethersfield, Conn. and Rev. Henry was the first ordained minister there. His homelot consisted of five acres and was bounded by the Wethersfield Green and the burying ground . According to an article in thn the "Connecticut Nutmegger", there was great dissatisfaction with the leadership of Rev. Smith (the wealthy ruling elder of the church, Clement Chaplin, incited rebellion in the flock against Rev. Henry and the people brought grievancvances against him), and because of this, the Connecticut legislature asked that he "lay down his place, if it be done according to God". Rev. Henry refused to resign, and the court found that there was no basis to the complaints . As a result, Mr. Chaplin and others were fined for what they had done against Rev. Smith. In 1637, Henry Smith from Wethersfield was one of 90 men who joined in the Pequot-Narrigansett War in Rhode Island . 
1203 I45243  Smith  John  Abt 1620  3 Apr 1706 

"Rock" was a designation this John Smith - and the community used to tell him apart from the other John Smiths living in the area at the same time.

Long Island Genealogy
http://longislandgenealogy.com/ligrocksmith.html
Early New Netherland Settlers
https://sites.rootsweb.com/~rclarke/page1/smith-j4.htm 
1204 I23513  Smith  Peter  1640  12 Jun 1719 

The Smith emigrants entered the Province of Maryland in 1660 and settled in St. Mary's County with their sons, James, Robert, and Peter Smith (b1657). According to family tradition, the Smith family came from Lincolnshire, England. 
1205 I25308  Smith  Richard  Abt 1589  Bef 30 Jan 1660 

Richard Smith was a Jamestown colonist and is a Qualifying Ancestor of the Jamestowne Society

He was born about 1589 in England and his parents were Mary (Browning) and John Thomas Smith of Gloucester, England. [

On 18 November 1618, Richard Smith of England, received a grant for land on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. He emigrated from England to Virginia on the ship "London Marchant" [sic] in March 1619/20.
After a stop off in Rhode Island, where he married Elizabeth Welburn, He soon took up his 1618 land grant on the Eastern Shore. On 23 September 1639 Richard possessed 200 acres of land in Accawmack County, Virginia.

The area where he resided became Northampton County, Virginia. 
1206 I9233  Smith  Samuel  27 Jan 1638  10 Sep 1703 

From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Smith-2069
Samuel lived at Northampton, MA 1666-1680, then moved to Hadley, MA to care for his widowed mother. Included in the letter referring to his father was the following reference to his stepfather, John Russell: "He was sometimes a little short of ye Charity which thinketh no Evil, at te least I was wont to think so when his Hand was too heavy on my Shoulder & I remembered ye sweetnesse & ye Charity of my firste Father, but on ye whole said he was a Goode Man & did well by my Mother & her children & no doubt we did often try his wit & temper." 
1207 I82  Smith  Susanna Anne  14 Nov 1698  25 Oct 1740 

Susanna came to Maryland around 1718. She was married a second time to William Metcalf, but no children reported. Then married a third time to John Bowles. 
1208 I45739  Smith  William Henry  Abt 1862  1898 
Died in a Threshing machine accident 
1209 I9016  Snowe  Susannah  19 Apr 1609  Aft 18 Oct 1667 

Susanna came with her husband and children in 1650. Thomas Gerrard's plantation records are the only ones still in existance. Because of these records we know today how the plantation was run in the 1600's. 
1210 I24215  Soule  George  Bef 1603  Between 20 Sep 1677 and 22 Jan 1679 

yDNA HAPLOGROUP: I-M253 (I-A20032)

George Soule's origins have not been discovered. The most promising record found to date is the baptism of a George Soule on 9 February 1595 at Tingrith, Bedford, son of William. However, recent DNA testing has now shown this Bedfordshire Soule family was not the direct ancestor of George Soule. Other Soule families using the name George can also be found in many other places counties across England in the 16th and 17th centuries. DNA testing has eliminated the predominant Soule families of Gloucester, Worcester, East and West Sussex, and Bedford. Louise Throop has published a reasonable hypothesis that George Soule may have been descendant of the Sol family of Leiden, who were involved in the printing press.

George Soule came on the Mayflower as a servant to the Edward Winslow family, indicating he was under 25 years old at the time; however, he did sign the "Mayflower Compact," suggesting he was over 18, and probably over 21. This puts his birth year at around 1595-1602. This matches well with his apparent marriage date of around 1625 at Plymouth: by the May 1627 Division of Cattle, he was married to Mary [Beckett], and they had had one son, Zachariah.

George Soule and family moved to Duxbury very early on, and he was a deputy to the Plymouth Court for a number of years beginning in 1642. He had volunteered for the Pequot War of 1637, but Plymouth's troops were not needed. He was on various committees, juries, and survey teams, during his life in Duxbury. In 1646, for example, he was appointed to the committee to deal with Duxbury's problem of the disorderly smoking of tobacco.

George Soule made out his will on 11 August 1677, and added a codicil to it on 20 September 1677. The codicil is quite interesting as it gives a little insight into a family squabble between son John and daughter Patience:

If my son John Soule above-named or his heirs or assigns or any of them shall at any time disturb my daughter Patience or her heirs or assigns or any of them in peaceable possession or enjoyment of the lands I have given her at Nemasket alias Middleboro and recover the same from her or her heirs or assigns or any of them; that then my gift to my son John Soule shall be void; and that then my will is my daughter Patience shall have all my lands at Duxbury and she shall be my sole executrix of this my last will and testament and enter into my housing lands and meadows at Duxbury. 
1211 I4544  Spalding  Edward  1596  26 Feb 1670 

Edward Spalding first came to America to Jamestown, Virginia when Sir G e o r g e Y eardly returned to Virginia from London abt 1619. He later retur n e d t o L o ndon to come to America on the ship "Griffin" in 1634 . His fa m i l y s o on followed. They settled first at Braintree, Massachusetts, the n i n W e n h am, Massachusetts, and finally in Chelmsford, Middlesex County , M a s s a chusetts, where they were among the earliest settlers.
He was admitted a freeman May 13, 1640, a juror in 1648, selectman in 1 6 5 4 , 1 6 56, 1660 and 1661, and surveyor of highways in 1663.
His will is recorded in Massachusetts. Back in those days, everything w a s l i s t ed in the will, since most people did not have much . So a will m i g h t l i st a bed left to the wife, a wooden spoon to a child , a butter c h u r n t o a nother child, etc. 
1212 I25743  Spann  Richard  8 Nov 1729  Sep 1774 

SAR Patriot #: P-294502
State of Service: Qualifying Service:

Birth: 1729
Death:

Additional References:
SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 
1213 I241  Spaulding  Joseph  30 Sep 1744  25 Feb 1840 

SAR Patriot #: P-294610
State of Service: CT/VT Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A107630

Birth: 30 Sep 1744 Plainfield / Windham / CT
Death: 25 Feb 1840 Middletown / Rutland / VT

Qualifying Service Description:
ALSO PRIVATE, SERGEANT
ORDERLY SERGEANT
SERGEANT MAJOR
ADJUTANT, CAPTs ELLIS, HART, ALLEN,COLs SAGE, ABBOTT, MEAD, LEE
Private, Capt Abel Merriman; Colonel Ebenezer Allen's Reg't, VT Militia, tour to Castleton, Oct 1780
Private, Capt Jacob Wood; Colonel Thomas Lee's Reg't, VT Militia, tours to Castleton, Jun & Oct 1781

Additional References:
SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004
Pension: *S22529
Goodrich. Vermont Men in the Rev War, pg 209, 381,468 
1214 I7146  Spoleto  Suppo  Abt 740  5 Mar 824 

Suppo I (or Suppone) (died 5 March 824) was a Frankish nobleman who hel d l a n d s i n the Kingdom of Italy in the early ninth century.

In 817, he was made Count of Brescia, Parma, Piacenza, Modena, and Berg a m o . H e w as also made a missus dominicus, along with the Brescian bisho p R a t a l d, for Italy. In 818, he was instrumental in putting down the re be l l i o n of Bernard against Emperor Louis the Pious. In 822, after the a b d i c a tion and death of Duke Winigis, Suppo was created Duke of Spoleto b y t h e g r a teful emperor and he passed Brescia to his son Mauring. Suppo' s d e a t h w as recorded by Einhard and Spoleto went to Adelard, who died w it h i n f i ve months, leaving the duchy to Mauring. 
1215 I7478  Sponheim  Engelbert  Abt 1075  13 Apr 1141 

He was founder of the county of Kraiburg in Bavaria. In 1124, he was ra i s e d t o t he Duchy of Carinthia and held it until his retirement in 1135 . H e w a s t h e son of Egelbert I of Sponheim and his wife Hadwig. 
1216 I8451  Spoor  Cornelius  19 Jun 1736  1790  SAR Patriot #: P-295228
State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A107471
Qualifying Service Description: Private, Colonel Robert Van Rensselaer, 8th Albany Militia
SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004
NY IN THE REV,ROBERTS, P.115

Cornelius was a founding settler of Egremont MA. 
1217 I7476  St. John  John  Abt 1235  29 Sep 1302 

In 1296, he took the city of Bayonne by assault, and its castle surrend e r e d a f ter a siege of eight days.
Thence marching to BELLEGARD, at the time invested by the Earl of Arras , h e w a s m a de prisoner, and conveyed to Paris; being, however, redeemed , ( i t w a s s aid, by Alfonsus*, King of Castile,) he was again in the war s o f G a s c ony, as well as in those of Scotland; and was afterwards deput ed a m b a s sador to France, with John, Earl of Warren, and other persons o f r a n k . 
1218 I7475  St.John  Robert  1199  Mar 1267 

William was succeeded by his son, '''RORERT DE ST. JOHN''', who had a m i l i t a ry summons to oppose the incursions of the Welsh, and in three yea r s a f t e rwards, obtained a license to fix a pale upon the bauk of his mo a t , a t B A SING; as also to continue it so fortified, during the king's p l e a s u re.

In the 50th of the same reign (1266), he was constituted governor of PO R C H E S TER Castle, and dying soon after, was succeeded by his son, (b y h i s w i f e A gnes, daughter of William de Cantilupe), JOHN DE ST. JOHN , Lo r d o f B a s ing, who succeeded likewise to the governorship of Porchester C a s t l e . 
1219 I45288  Staats  Jan Janszen  Abt 1645  25 Dec 1706 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery

Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1220 I10920  Stafferton  Elizabeth  Abt 1448  Abt 1506 

Sources
Clay, J.W. (1897). "Burgoyne," in Visitations of Cambridgshire 1575 and 1619. Publications of the Harleian Society, XLI, pp. 25. London. Google Books. 
1221 I1199  Stafford  Robert  1220  4 Jun 1282 

Robert inherited the Barony upon the death of his childless older broth e r , H e r vey. Baron Robert of Stafford, who in the 25th year of Henry III , 1 2 4 1 , u pon doing homage and paying 100 pounds for his relief, had liv er y o f h i s l ands. This feudal lord was in the wars of Gascogne, during t h e 3 8 t h y ear of His Majesty, Henry III, 1254, and in four years afterwa r d s , 1 2 58, he had a military summons to march against the Welsh. He mar r i e d A l ice, one of the daughters and co-heir of Thomas Corbet , of Caus , S h r o p shire, and dying in 1282, was succeeded by his son, Ba ron Nicho la s o f S t a f ford 
1222 I1198  Stafford Bagot  Hervey  Abt 1174  5 Dec 1237 

In 1195 Hervey Bagot, whose family possessed Blithfield in the union of U t t o x e ter, hundred of South Pirehill co Stafford, and Bagot's-Bromley at t h e t i m e o f the Domesday survey, married the heiress of Baron Stafford, a n d H e r v ey's son assumed the surname and title of Stafford. 
1223 I263  Steere  Richard  3 Jun 1707  16 Oct 1797  He was made a freeman of the colony on May 2, 1732; signed a petition against lotteries on January 16th, 1733. Being influential in public affairs, he represented the town of Glocester in the General Assembly from 1736 - 1766; a justice of the Court of Common Pleas for the County of Providence for 34 years; chief justice 1782 - 84. At Glocester he was president of the Town Council for about 40 years; town clerk for 60 years, having this position from June of 1737 until the day of his death. 
1224 I12471  Stevens  Dionis  1610  16 Sep 1684 
In 1653 Dionis Coffin was brought to court for selling beer 'for three pence a quart,' which was higher than the accepted rate. When it was proved that she put six bushels of malt into a hogshead of beer instead of the required four, she was let off. Her traditionally remembered comment was, "I'll have better beer than my neighbors and be paid for it. A fig for the law." 
1225 I45135  Stevens  John  1540  9 Mar 1608 

John Stevens,was born probably about 1540, died between 9 Mar. 1608-09 and 15 Dec 1611. His wife is unknown.

John Stephen of Brixton, made his will 9 Mar. 1608-09. He mentions, Johan, daughter of Robert Stephen. Son-in-law, Robert Aulgar. Daughter Elizabeth, wife of James Thorne. To Dunes, wife of Robert Stephen, £4 per year, beginning at my death or the death of my son Robert. To servant Walter Bowman. To William, Tristram and John, sons of Robert Stephen. Residuary Legatee and executor, son Robert Stephen. (Signed) The mark of John Stephen. Proved 15 Dec. 1611. (Arch. Totnes.) 
1226 I45629  Stevens  Robert  12 Aug 1575   

Sources of information:
1. Mary Elizabeth Sinnott, Annals of the Sinnott, Rogers, Coffin, Carlies, Reeves, Bodine and Allied Families (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1905), pp. 65-84.
2. W. E. Mugford, “106. Tristram Coffin, of Brixton, Devon,” Devon Notes and Queries, vol. 2, Jan. 1902 to Oct. 1903 (Exeter, Devon: James g. Commin, 1903), pp. 142-144.
3. Stephen Walter Coffin, A Statement on Our Branch of the Coffin Family (1977), pp. 3, 7.; citing Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/CoffinFamilyByStephenWalkerCoffin1975/Coffin%20Family%20by%20Stephen%20Walker%20Coffin%201975_djvu.txt).
4. Sylvanus J. Macy, “The Coffin Family,” The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 24 (April 1870): 149-154; citing American Ancestors ().

He was a Churchwarden of Brixton Parish; also, Yeoman. 
1227 I45190  Stevenson  Abigail  1640  13 Oct 1715 

PLEASE READ: According to the Appendix of the 179 page study of the Stevensons of early Newtown, L. I., in "Thomas Stevenson of London, England and HIs Descendants," (New Jersey: Hiram E. Deats, 1902), 131–137: The Abigail Stevenson who md. 1) Daniel Dent
PLEASE READ: According to the Appendix of the 179 page study of the Stevensons of early Newtown, L. I., in "Thomas Stevenson of London, England and HIs Descendants," (New Jersey: Hiram E. Deats, 1902), 131–137: The Abigail Stevenson who md. 1) Daniel Denton and 2) Daniel Whitehead was, dau. of EDWARD Stevenson and Ann. The widow Ann Stevenson later md. William Grave. The original versions of she and her husbands, that used to be on Family Tree unfortunately disappeared. Am trying to restore the family accurately. Please see the biography of this family attached in Memories. There was a kinsman Thomas Stevenson in the area about whom the majority of the book is writtent, and unfortunately he has now also become the father to more than his own huge posterity. Thomas md. 15 Aug 1645 at Reformed Dutch Church, New Amsterdam, Mary Bernard whose maiden name was Bullock.Thomas's children were John, Thomas, Edward and Sarah who md. Patrick Hire. (p. 14.). Other works give Thomas the credit for the extra children but ignore the existence of the early Edward who died by 1662 after which his widow Anne md. William Graves. She then died by 1670 when daughters Elizabeth and Abigail are mentioned in her will.

Children of Edward and Ann Stevenson were Jonathan Stevenson who md. Mary Allen, 16 July 1684; Elizabeth who md. John Everett of Jamaica who will was probated 21 May 1691 and Abigail Stevenson who md. !) Daniel Denton and had 2 children and 2) Daniel Whitehead.by whom she had 7 children.
ABIGAIL STEVENSON was born about 1642 of Newtown, Long Island, New York, to Edward Stevenson (1610-1662) and Anne Unknown (1614-1670.) She married (1) Daniel Denton in 1660 (divorced); (2) *Daniel Whitehead 2 October 1672, Jamaica, Queens, New York.

Abigail Stevenson died 15 October 1715, age 73, at Jamaica, Queens, New York.

Daniel Denton married Abigail Stevenson in 1659. They had three children. They divorced in 1672. In 1676 he married Hannah Leonard they had six children.

*Note: He wrote a book in London encouraging settlers to ancestor.

The following are Books that can be found on Google Books with genealogical data on Abigail Stevenson (1640):

Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants
By John Rudderow Stevenson

See pages 132-133.

ABIGAIL STEVENSON was born about 1642 of Newtown, Long Island, New York, to Edward Stevenson (1610-1662) and Anne Unknown (1614-1670.) She married (1) Daniel Denton in 1660 (divorced); (2) *Daniel Whitehead 2 October 1672, Jamaica, Queens, New York.

Abigail Stevenson died 15 October 1715, age 73, at Jamaica, Queens, New York.

Daniel Denton married Abigail Stevenson in 1659. They had three children. They divorced in 1672. In 1676 he married Hannah Leonard they had six children.

Wikitree:
Abigail Stevenson was born about 1640, the daughter of Edward and Ann Stevenson of Newtown, Long Island.[1] [2] [3]
• Note: Many of the sources noted here indicate a strong possibility that she may have been the daughter of Thomas Stevenson and Maria Bullock[4] [2] [3])
About 1660, she married Daniel Denton of Jamaica, Long Island.[5] [1] [2] Their children included:
1. Daniel,[2] born 1661, who married Deborah. After he died in 1690, his wife remarried Gabriel Luffe. Gabriel Luffe is noted in Maj. Daniel Whitehead Jr's will as his daughter-in-law[1]
2. Abigail,[2] born 1663, who married Benjamin Stebbins,[6] and is also noted in Maj. Whitehead's will as his daughter.[1]
In 1672 Daniel Denton petitioned the court for a divorce from his wife Abigail Stevenson, based on her adultery. The court declined to consider his petition, so Daniel Denton appealed to the Governor and Council. The Governor granted a divorce, apparently including permission for Daniel to remarry. A few months after Daniel Denton's divorce petition was granted, Abigail petitioned the Court of Assizes for permission to remarry, expressing "regret for her misconduct." Her petition was granted by the Governor and Council on 4 October 1672. [7]
Abigail remarried, probably not long after her petition was approved, to Major Daniel Whitehead, Jr.[8] [1] Daniel Denton married Hannah Leonard as his second wife in 1676. [9]
• Note: The date of Abigail's marriage to Daniel Whitehead is assumed as 1672, but this causes a problem with Mercy, who married Thomas Betts in 1683 and had a son in 1685.
The children of Maj. Daniel Whitehead and Abigail Stevenson included:
1. Mercy,[4] who married Thomas Betts,[2] [10] and then married Capt Joseph Sackett in 1711.[3] [1]
2. jonathan,[2] born 1672, who married Sarah Field and died in 1739.[3][4][1]
3. Thomas,[2] [4] who married Jane Creed, and who died in 1732[3] [1]
4. Deborah,[4] born 1675 who married Thomas Hicks, and who died in 1712.[2] [3] [1]
5. Elizabeth,[4] who married Antony Waters Jr.[2] [3] [1]
6. Mary,[4] who married John Taylor, and then married Thomas Burroughs[2] [3] [1]
7. Amy,[4], born June 17, 1676[10] who married Jacob Doughty[2] [3] [1]
8. Abigail[4], who married Benjamin Stebbings[3]

Newly created profiles
>>> GENERATIONS of Whitehead families have been newly created with NO records and NO sources and NO established family connections.
Most all of these newly created profiles have matching established profile WITH records and sources -
BUT - there are GENERATIONS of newly created profiles to merge. TOO great a task for one person. <<<

!SOURCE: GENEALOGIES OF LONG ISLAND FAM
!SOURCE: GENEALOGIES OF LONG ISLAND FAMILIES, 1987 ED, VOL 1 PG 671-2 
1228 I7674  Stewart  Alexander  Jan 1214  16 Jun 1283 

Alexander Stewart (1214 - 1283) was 4th hereditary High Steward of Scot l a n d f r om his father's death in 1246. He was also known as Alexander of D u n d o n ald.

A son of Walter Stewart, 3rd High Steward of Scotland by his wife Bethó c , d a u g h ter of Gille Crí st, Earl of Angus, Alexander is said to have ac co m p a n ied Louis IX of France on the Seventh Crusade (1248-1254). In 125 5 h e w a s o n e of the councillors of King Alexander III, though under age .

He was the principal commander under King Alexander III of Scotland at t h e B a t t le of Largs, on 2 October 1263, when the Scots defeated the Norw e g i a n s under Haakon IV. The Scots invaded and conquered the Isle of Man t h e f o l l owing year, which was, with the whole of the Western Isles, then a n n e x e d to the Crown of Scotland. 
1229 I746  Stewart  Annabella  18 Aug 1432  27 Jun 1509 

Princess Annabella Stewart was the youngest daughter of King James I an d h i s w i f e, Joan Beaufort. Her date of birth is not provided in source m a t e r i al but, based on life events and her position in the family, might b e p r e s u med to be circa 1435.

She was betrothed on 14 December 1444 to Louis of Savoy, count of Genev a ( a n d l a ter King of Cyprus). He was eight years old at that time. The f o l l o w ing year (1445) Annabella was taken to Savoy for the marriage cere m o n y . S he was about ten years old, and her groom was nine. On 3 March 1 4 5 5 / 6 t he Bishop of Galloway and the Chancellor of Savoy agreed, in the p r e s e n ce of King Charles VII, that the marriage should be dissolved. The g r o o m ' s father agreed to pay 25,000 "for the damages and interests of th e w i f e " a nd for Annabella's expenses in travelling back to Scotland. Th er e w e r e n o known children from this marriage.

She married, secondly, before 10 March 1460, as his second wife, Sir Ge o r g e G o rdon, then Master of Huntly. George was five years younger than L o u i s , h er first husband. He had married (first) at the age of fourteen, t h e w i d o w Elizabeth Dunbar, who was thirty years of age. That marriage w a s e v e n tually dissolved on grounds on consanguinity. Confirmation of th e m a r r i age of Annabella with George Gordon is noticed in a grant of lan ds b y h e r b r other James II made to George and Annabella joint l y on th e d at e o f t h eir marriage.

In May 1466, Gordon started divorce proceedings, on the basis of consan g u i n i ty, and was divorced on 24 July 1471. 
1230 I18338  Stewart  Elizabeth  Abt 1455  1520 

The identity of Elizabeth Stewart is uncertain. Sir William Mure of Row a l l an, writing in his Historie, said that she was the daughter of the f i r s t Lord Avondale, but the ediitor of the Historie contradicted this, s a y i ng that the first Lord Avondale died childless. According to the edi t o r , the second Lord Avondale left several sons and daughters: "althoug h t h e m arriage of this Lady, with the heir of Rowallan, does not appear i n a n y o f the accounts published." 
1231 I7446  Stewart  James  2 Mar 1243  16 Jul 1309 

He succeeded his father as High Steward in 1283. In 1286 he was named o n e o f s i x G uardians of Scotland.
In 1296 he signed the Ragman Roll, through which he declared homage and f e a l t y t o Edward I. 
1232 I6972  Stewart  James  Abt 25 Jul 1394  21 Feb 1437 

James Stewart was born in July 1394 at Dunfermline, Fife, the third and o n l y s u r viving son of Robert III, King of Scots, and his queen-consort, A n n a b e lla Drummond. He was nearly sixteen years younger than his eldest b r o t h e r, born when his mothe r w as in her early forties. James was seve n y e a r s o ld when his mother died in 1401, and after her death he was se nt t o t h e c a stle of St Andrews and placed in the care of Bishop Henry W ard la w f o r h is education.

In March of 1402 his older brother David died in prison and James becam e h e i r t o t he throne. As the kingdom increasingly devolved into a state o f c o m p l ete lawlessness, Robert III decided Scotland was no longer a saf e p l a c e f or his youngest son. T h e king arranged for James to be secre tl y e s c o rted by Henry St Clair, earl of Orkney, to the Bass Rock where h e w a s t o b o ard a ship for France, finishing his education abroad and re tu r n in g w hen the political situation in Scotland was more settle d . Un f o r t u nately the ship was captured 4 April 1406 off Flambrough Head by E n g l i s h pirates who, realizing the importance of their prisoner, took th e t w e l v e year old boy directly to the English king, and James was immed ia t e l y i mprisoned in the Tower of London. He was to remain a prisoner o f t h e E n g lish, under fairly strict custody, for the next nineteen years .

Robert III died shortly after his son James was captured, and a council h e l d a t P e rth in June 1406 named the young James as 'our king' and appoi n t e d h i s uncle Robert Stewart, duke of Albany, earl of Fife and Menteit h , t o a c t a s governor of Scotla n d in James's absence. Negotiations f o r h i s r e lief went on continuously from the time of his capture but Alb a n y , w h o rather enjoyed the unlimited power he found himself with as go v e r n o r of the kingdom, was in no hurry for James to return to Scot la n d . J a m e s outlived both Henry IV and Henry V, and was still a prisoner i n E n g l a nd during the minority of Henry VI. In the end, it was Albany's d e a t h i n 1 420 and England's hope that if James were returned to the thro n e o f S c o tland, that countr y wou ld no longer support France in its wa r w i t h E n gland, that brought negotiations for James's release to a head . I n t h e f a ll of 1423 a treaty was finalized: a payment of sixty thousa nd m a r k s , in installments, was to be made for the king's relea se (th i s w a s t e r med a reimbursement for James's care during his years in custo dy , r a t h er than as a ransom); Scottish troops would be withdrawn from F r an c e ; a nd James would agree to marry an English woman of noble birth.
James I of Scotland is a descendant of Magna Carta surety barons

04 Apr 1406: King of Scotland
Crowned 2 May 1424 Scone Abbey
10 Dec 1404: Earl of Carrick
10 Dec 1404: Duke of Rothesay

b. 25 July or De 1394 Dunfermline Palace, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotlan d
d. 21 Feb 1437 age 42 Monastry of the Friars Preachers, Perth, Perthshi r e , S c o tland 
1233 I6967  Stewart  James  30 Dec 1394  17 Aug 1451 

The Black Knight of Lorn was born at Innermeath, Scotland. His father, S i r J o h n S tewart (d. 26 Apr 1421), was ambassador to England and was mar r i e d t o I sabel MacDougall (d. 21 Dec 1439), heiress to the House of Erg a d i a , t he senior line descending from Somerled, King of Mann and the Is l e s . H e w as a direct male line descendant of Alexander Stewart, 4th Hig h S t e w a rd of Scotland, through his second son Sir John Stewart of Bonki ll , w h o w a s killed at the Battle of Falkirk. His mother was also a desc e nd a n t o f Robert I of Scotland through his second marriage to Elizabeth d e B u r g h . 
1234 I7438  Stewart  James  16 Oct 1430  3 Aug 1460 

James II was born on October 16, 1430, one of twins. The other twin die d i n i n f a ncy leaving James as heir. There may have been other problems w i th t h e b i rth because James had a vermilion birthmark on his face which l e d c o n t emporaries to call him “Fiery Face". This reference to the verm i l i o n b irthmark covering the left side of his face, which was deemed by c o n t e m poraries as an outward sign of a fiery temper.

Was King of Scots from 1437 until his death in 1460. The eldest survivi n g s o n o f J ames I of Scotland, he succeeded to the Scottish throne at t h e a g e o f s ix, following the assassination of his father. The first Sco t t i s h m onarch not to be crowned at Scone, James II's coronation took pl a c e a t H o lyrood Abbey in March 1437. James II was known as Fiery Face, a r e f e r e nce to the vermilion birthmark covering the left side of his face, w h i c h w a s deemed by contemporaries as an outward sign of a fiery temper.

James was a politic and singularly successful king. He was popular with t h e c o m m oners, with whom, like most of the Stewarts, he socialised often , i n t i m e s of peace and war. His legislation has a markedly popular cha ra ct e r . H e does not appear to have inherited his father's taste for lit e r a t u re, which was shared by at least two of his sisters; but the found a t i o n o f the University of Glasgow during his reign, by Bishop Turnbull , s h o w s t hat he encouraged learning; and there are also traces of his e nd o w m e nts to St. Salvator's, the new college of Archbishop Kennedy at S t A n d r e ws. He possessed much of his father's restless energy. However, h i s m u r d er of the earl of Douglas leaves a stain on his reign.

Killed by a bursting piece of ordnance at the siege of Roxburgh castle 
1235 I8099  Stewart  James  17 Mar 1473  9 Sep 1513 

In a ceremony at the altar of Glasgow Cathedral on 10 December 1502, James confirmed the Treaty of Perpetual Peace with Henry VII of England. By this treaty James married Henry's daughter Margaret Tudor. After a wedding by proxy in London, the marriage was confirmed in person on 8 August 1503 at Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh. Their wedding was commemorated by the gift of a Book of Hours. 
1236 I4420  Stewart  James  1 Jan 1502  Abt 1547 

Earl of Crawford. Early history: The title descended to the first E a r l ' s d escendants without much incident, until the death of David Linds a y , 8 t h E arl of Crawford in 1542. The eighth Earl had a son, Alexander, c o m m o n ly called the Wicked Master, who frequently quarreled with his fat h e r a n d e ven tried to murder him. The Wicked Master was sentenced to de a t h f o r h is crime, and the eighth Earl conveyed his title to a cousin, a l s o c a l led David Lindsay, a descendant of the third Earl of Crawford, a n d e x c l uded from the succession all of the Wicked Master's descendants. H o w e v e r, the ninth earl, although he had his own sons, named the Wicked M a s t e r 's son David as his heir; thus, in 1558, at the ninth Earl's death , t h e e a r l d o m r eturned to the main branch of the family. David Lind sa y , 1 0 t h Earl of Crawford (d. 1574) Source: Wikipedia, Earl of Crawfor d . 
1237 I7976  Stewart  James  10 Apr 1512  14 Dec 1542 

King James V (Linlithgow Palace, 10 April 1512 - Falkland Palace, Fife, 1 4 D e c e m ber 1542), third and only child to survive infancy, successor to h i s f a t h er. 
1238 I784  Stewart  Joan  1 Nov 1428  22 Jun 1498 

Lady Beaufort creates three seperate family lines. First through James S t u a r t I . Both James Stuart II and Joan Stuart continue down our family l i n e . S e condly, through James Stewart the Black Knight, her second husb a n d w h o 's son also continued our family line. First confluence is when J a m e s I V ( 4th generation removed from James I and Lady Beaufort, marries L a d y I s a bel Stewart (4th generation removed from Lady Beaufort and James S t e w a r t, the Black Knight).

This confluence is futher streghthen when four generations later, Sir W i l l i a m Bruce (decendant of James Stuart and Lady Beaufort's daughter Jo a n S t u a rt) marries Jane Fleming (decendent from the union of James IV a n d L a d y I sabel Stewart. 
1239 I127  Stewart  John  1358  21 Apr 1421 

Sir John Stewart of Innermeath. "He exchanged with his brother Robert t h e l a n d s of Durrisdeer for the lordship of Lorn, to which the latter su c c e e d ed through his wife Janet De Ergadia. He is designed Lord Of Lorn i n 1 4 0 7 . 
1240 I765  Stewart  John  1381  17 Aug 1424 

He fought in France against the English during the Hundred Years War, s e r v i n g with distinction, but was killed at the Battle of Verneuil on 17 A u g u s t 1 424. 
1241 I8067  Stewart  John  21 Sep 1439  15 Sep 1512 

As head of the powerful family of Stewart of Darnley he was created Gov e r n o r o f Rothesay Castle in 1465 and appointed Warden of the West March e s o f S c o tland. When the male line of the Earldom of Lennox became exti n c t h e w a s heir to half of the lands and made a deal with the co-heir i n w h i c h h e was made Earl of Lennox in 1473. The succession was disputed b y J o h n o f H aldane, who claimed succession through descent from Duncan, 8 t h e a r l . Darnley, however, prevailed and his right to the earldom was n o t d i s p uted for the last seven years of his life.

He was a loyal ally of James III during his war against the rebel lords l e d b y A r c hibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Angus. After the death of the King a t t h e B a t tle of Sauchieburn and the coronation of his underage son Jame s I V h e r a i sed an army to fight against the rebel lords who now control le d t h e g o vernment. The rebels had seized control of Edinburgh Castle a n d n o w h a d possession of the important royal artillery. Included in the a r s e n a l of Edinburgh Castle was the cannon Mons Meg which had been a wed d i n g g i ft from Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy to the King of Scots a g e n e r a tion earlier. Using this weapon they laid siege to Crookston Castl e , s e a t o f the Stewarts of Darnley, forcing the Earl of Lennox to surre n d e r .

After his surrender he was allowed to keep his lands and they passed to h i s e l d e st son Matthew Stewart, 2nd Earl of Lennox who was one of the le a d e r s o f the Scottish army killed at the Battle of Flodden. 
1242 I7437  Stewart  John Robert  14 Aug 1337  4 Apr 1406 

Robert was created Earl of Menteith in 1361 and Earl of Fife in 1371. H e s e r v e d as 'Governor of Scotland' from 1388 until his death in 1420. F i n a l l y, he was created 'Duke of Albany' on April 28, 1398, 'Earl of Ath o l l ' S e ptember 2, 1403 and 'Earl of Buchan' in 1406.

While he never held the title of king he did hold equivalent power as g o v e r n or.

Robert III has been variously described as "courteous," "dignified," an d k i n d - hearted." He wanted Scotland to be peaceful and prosperous, and f o r t h e m o st part his subjects recognized this and regarded him with aff e c t i o n. However, he was completely ineffectual as a leader, having nei t h e r t h e energy nor the will power to control his nobles. In 1393 he d i d m a k e a n attempt to seize control of the government back from his bro t h e r , b ut the results were disastrous. Although external relations with E n g l a n d and France were relatively peaceful, within Scotland itself lawl e s s n e ss was rampant. His own youngest brother, Alexander, whose ruthles s p i l l a ging in the northern regions earned him the nickname of 'the Wol f o f B a d e noch,' was excommunicated by the Bishop of Moray for seizing s om e o f h i s l ands. The Wolf of Badenoch retaliated by setting fire to th e t o w n o f E lgin and burning the magnificent cathedral of Elgin to the g ro u n d . B ribery and corruption were rife, there was a widening rift betw e e n t h e L owlands and the Highlands, and clan warfare rose to new levels . 
1243 I6954  Stewart  Mary  13 May 1453  16 May 1488 

Mary Stewart, Countess of Arran (13 May 1453 - May 1488) was the eldest d a u g h t er of King James II of Scotland and Mary of Guelders. Her brother w a s K i n g J ames III of Scotland. She married twice: firstly, to Thomas Bo y d , 1 s t E arl of Arran; secondly, to James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton. I t w a s t h r ough her children by her second husband that the Hamilton Earl s o f A r r a n and the Stewart Earls of Lennox derived their claim to the K in gd o m o f S cotland.

Mary was born at Stirling Castle on 13 May 1453, the eldest daughter of J a m e s I I o f Scotland and Mary of Guelders. She had five siblings, includ i n g J a m es III, who ascended the Scottish throne in 1460 upon their fath e r ' s a c cidental death by an exploding cannon. Mary's mother died in 146 3 , l e a v ing her an orphan at the age of ten. 
1244 I6973  Stewart  Robert  2 Mar 1316  19 Apr 1390 

Robert (Stewart) King of Scots married Elizabeth Mure (abt 1320 - bef M a y 1 3 5 5 ) on 22 Nov 1347 and married Euphemia Ross (abt 1329 - abt 1387) a f t 2 M a y 1 3 55 and is the father of 23 children and the grandfather of 7 0 g r a n d children

Robert II, (born March 2, 1316-died April 19, 1390, Dundonald, Ayrshire , S c o t . ), king of Scots from 1371, first of the Stewart (Stuart) sovere ig n s i n S c otland. Heir presumptive for more than 50 years, he had littl e e f f e c t on Scottish political and military affairs when he finally acc ed e d t o t h e throne.

On the death (1326) of his father, Walter the Steward, in 1326, Robert b e c a m e s eventh hereditary steward of Scotland at age 10. From 1318 he wa s h e i r p r esumptive to his maternal grandfather, King Robert I the Bruce ( d i e d 1 3 29). He lost this position in 1324 when the Bruce’s son, afterwa r d K i n g D avid II, was born; but two years later the Scottish Parliament c o n f i r med Robert the Steward as heir apparent to David. 
1245 I6896  Stewart  Robert  1 Jul 1335  3 Sep 1420 

Robert, Earl of Fife and from 1398 Duke of Albany (died 1420), married i n 1 3 6 1 M a rgaret Graham, Countess of Menteith, and his second wife in 13 81 M u r i e lla Keith (died in 1449).

Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany (c. 1340 - 3 September 1420) was a membe r o f t h e S c ottish royal family who served as regent (at least partially ) t o t h r e e different Scottish monarchs (Robert II, Robert III, and Jame s I ) . A r u t hless politician, Albany was widely regarded as having cause d t h e m u r der of his nephew, the Duke of Rothesay, and brother to the fu tu r e K i n g James I of Scotland. James was held in captivity in England f o r e i g h teen years, during which time Albany served as regent in Scotlan d , k i n g i n all but name. He died in 1420 and was succeeded by his son, M u r d o c h Stewart, Duke of Albany, who would be executed for treason when J a m e s r e turned to Scotland in 1425, almost causing the complete ruin of t h e A l b a ny Stewarts. 
1246 I7224  Stewart  Walter  Abt 1170  Abt 1241 

Walter, Steward of Dundonald (c. 1198-1246) was 3rd hereditary High Ste w a r d o f S cotland and Justiciar of Scotia. He witnessed a charter by Ki n g A l e x ander II, under the designation of "Walterus filius Alani, Senes c a l l u s, Justiciar Scotiae" and it may be that seal which Nisbet describ e d p e r t aining to Walter Hereditary High Steward of Scotland. Around the s e a l i t s t ates "Sigill. Walteri filii Allani". 
1247 I35208  Stiles  Edward Copeland  1828  Apr 1895 

Edward was US Counsel to Austrailia 
1248 I316  Stiles  Edward James  25 Jul 1786  24 Aug 1850 

From Margaret H. Harrison's "A Charleston Album":
"Two presidents had known him intimately. As a child, in his Grandfather Stiles' home, George Washington used to bounce him on his knee and in later life, that elegant bachelor, James Buchanan, was much in his company. 
1249 I8710  Stiles  Margaretta Love  14 Jan 1827  28 Jun 1909 

From Margaret H. Harrison's "A Charleston Album":

Margaretta and her brothers and her one sister were born at the country estate "Clermont" near Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Their city home "Green Hill" lay beyond the then limits of Philadelphia.

Her father centered all his hopes on young Margaretta who was far more accomplished than most women of the time. Private tutors had given her a thorough grounding not only in English literature, but in European and American history as well as in French and in Latin. As her father had frequent visitors from Paris, Margaretta had been taught to speak excellent French, and she presided over her father's dinner parties with grace and wit. 
1250 I45465  Stoothoff  Aeltje Cornelis  Abt 1615  1683 

Yearbook of the Central Bureau for Genealogy, The Hague, NL, 1995, p. 175. Name also given as Aeltien Cornelis COOL. !BIRTH: estimated by Arie Noot, 1999. Dies in 1683 leaving behind four children Willem, Jan, Neeltje and Marritje Gerritsdr van Couwenhoven. She mentioned as of Nieuwkerk. 
1251 I4637  Storer  Martha Ann  1642  3 Aug 1717 

Ann Storer lies buried in Calvert County, Md., on the Basil Duke farm n o w o c c u pied by C.R.Mahler. 
1252 I27569  Stott  Anna  7 Oct 1772  1840  First Presby. Church 
1253 I45424  Strycker  Eytje Janse  1651    Old Newtown Cemetery 
1254 I45424  Strycker  Eytje Janse  1651   

In 1652, she immigrated to the New World as an infant.
Early Settlers of Kings Co., Long Island, New York, 974.7211 D2s, pg. 289. 
1255 I45417  Strycker  Gerret Hermans  Abt 1584  1650 

Virginia MacDonald McCall, 13083 Bradwell Ave, Sylmar Ca 91342 2) Genealogies of Long Island Families from N.Y. Gen. & Biog. Record, Vol I & II. 3)

End of Line: (Also for his unknown wife) There is absolutely no documentation to continue this line. A Red Alert has been placed on this Family as it has been extensively researched by a Certified Professional Researcher.

See two research projects totaling 26 pages in son's (Captain Jan Gerritsen Strycker M7S7-VHJ) Note Section. Both of which completed by an Accredited Professional Researcher 
1256 I45511  Strycker  Jan Gerritsen  Abt 1610   

Genealogical Record of the Strycker Family (1887) by William Scudder Stryker:

Jan Strÿcker was born in Holland in the year 1615. He emigrated from Ruinen, a village in the province of Drenthe, with his wife (Lamberje Sueberling), two sons and four daughters, and arrived at New Amsterdam in the year 1652. Leaving behind him all the privileges and rights which might be his by descent in the old world, he sought to start his family on new soil in habits of industry and honesty. He was a man of ability and education, for his subsequent history shows him to have been prominent in the civil and religious community in which his lot was cast. His first wife in Holland was named Lambertje Seubering, and by her all his children were born there or in this country. She was certainly living in 1663. After her death he married, April 30, 1679, Swantje Jans, the widow of Cornelis De Potter, of Brooklyn. She died in the year 1686. On March 31, 1687, he married a third time, Teuntje Teunis, of Flatbush, widow of Jacob Hellakers, of New Amsterdam. She survived her husband. She is recorded as having united with the Dutch Church in New Amsterdam March 3, 1697. Jan Strycker remained in New Amsterdam a little over a year after his arrival there, and in the year 1654 he took the lead in founding a Dutch colony on Long Island at what was called Midwout, probably from a little village of that name in the province of North Holland. It was also called Middlewoods, possibly from some of the features of that locality. The modern name of the place is Flatbush. On the nth of December, 1653, while still in New Amsterdam, Jan Strycker joined with others in a petition of the Commonalty of the New Netherlands and a remonstrance against the conduct of Director Stuyvesant. The petition recited that "they apprehended the establishment of an arbitrary government over them; that it was contrary to the genuine principles of well regulated governments that one or more men should arrogate to themselves the exclusive power to dispose at will of the life and property of any individual; that it was odious to every free-born man, principally so to those whom God has placed in a free state on newly settled lands. We humbly submit that 'tis one of our privileges that our consent, or that of our representatives, is necessarily required in the enactment of laws and orders." It is remarkable that at this early day this indictment was drawn up, this " bill of rights " was published. But these men came from the blood of the hardy Northmen and imbibed with the free air of America the determination to be truly free themselves. 
1257 I45411  Strycker  Jannetje Jan  Abt 1635  Aft Apr 1715 
Old Newtown Cemetery 
1258 I45259  Stryker  Aeltje Janse  Abt 1641  1697 

She came to NA with her parents i n 1652. She and her husband became members of the Amersfort DRC where their names are recorded in 1677. They reared 10 children. Some took on the name Abramse and located in Dutchess Co. NY. Among them were Derick, Lambertje and Gerrit. Abraham came from Flushing Holland and was a magistrate and church elder in Flatlands NY. 
1259 I8400  Stuart  Charles  18 Nov 1600  30 Jan 1649 

King Charles I ( 1625 - 1649 )

1625 - Charles I succeeds his father, James I.
1626 - Parliament attempts to impeach the Duke of Buckingham and is dis s o l ved by Charles.
1627 - England goes to war with France, but at La Rochelle the Duke of B u c k ingham fails to relieve the besieged Huguenots.
1628 - The Petition of Right a declaration of the “rights and liberties o f t h e s ubject" is presented to the King, who agrees to it under protest .
1628 - Physician William Harvey demonstrates the circulation of blood i n t h e b ody
1629 - Charles dissolves Parliament and rules by himself until 1640.
1630 - The colony of Massachusetts is founded in America
1633 - Work begins on the building which is now Buckingham Palace in Lo n d o n
1637 - Charles tries to force new prayer book on Scots, who resist by s i g n ing the National Covenant.
1639 - Act of Toleration in England established religious toleration
1640 - Charles summons the Short Parliament, which he dissolves three w e e k s later when it refuses to grant him money.
1640 - Long Parliament summoned, which lasts until 1660. It can only be d i s s olved by its members.
1641 - Abolition of the Star Chamber and Court of High Commission.
1642 - Charles fails in his attempt to arrest five MPs.
1642 - Outbreak of Civil War. Charles raises his standard at Nottingham . T h e R oyalists win a tactical victory the Parliamentary army at the Ba tt l e o f Edgehill but the outcome is inconclusive.
1643 - Royalists defeat Parliamentary army at Chalgrove Field, and take B r i s tol. Battle of Newbury is indecisive.
1644 - York is besieged by Parliamentary army until relieved by Prince R u p e rt. Royalists defeated at Marston Moor.
1644 - Oliver Cromwell and the Puritans enforce and Act of Parliament b a n n ing Christmas Day celebrations
1645 - Parliament creates New Model Army, which defeats the Royalist ar m y a t N aseby on 16 June.
1646 - Charles surrenders to the Scots, who hand him over to Parliament .
1646 - Negotiations take place between King and Parliament. King conspi r e s w ith Scots to invade England on his behalf.
1647 - Charles escapes to the Isle of Wight but is captured. He is trie d b y P a rliament and found guilty of high treason.
1648 - A Scots army supporting Charles is defeated at Preston.
1649 - Charles I is executed. There follows 11 years of rule by Parliam e n t a s the Commonwealth under Cromwell. 
1260 I7974  Stuart  Charles  29 May 1630  6 Feb 1685 

King Charles II ( 1660 - 1685 )

1658 - Death of Oliver Cromwell. He is succeeded by his son Richard Cro m w e ll
1659 - Richard Cromwell is forced to resign. The Rump Parliament is res t o r ed.
1660 - Charles II returns to England from Holland and is restored to th e t h r one.
1662 - Act of Uniformity compels Puritans to accept the doctrines of th e C h u rch of England or leave the church.
1662 - Royal Society for the improvement of science founded
1664 - England seizes the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam, changing i t s n a me to New York.
1665 - Outbreak of the Second Anglo-Dutch War.
1665 - The Great Plague strikes London and over 60,000 die.
1666 - The Great Fire of London rages for four days and three nights. T w o t h irds of central London is destroyed and 65,000 are left homeless.
1667 - The Earl of Clarendon is replaced by a five-man Cabal.
1667 - Paradise Lost by John Milton published
1667 - A Dutch fleet sails up the River Medway captures the English fla g s h ip The Royal Charles and sinks three other great ships
1670 - Secret Treaty of Dover, by which Charles agrees to declare himse l f a C a tholic and restore Catholicism in England in return for secret s u bsi d ies from Louis XIV of France.
1670 - Hudson Bay Company founded in North America
1671 - Thomas Blood caught stealing the Crown Jewels
1672 - Outbreak of the Third Dutch War. Naval battle of Solebay.
1673 - Test Act keeps Roman Catholics out of political office.
1674 - Death of John Milton
1674 - Peace made with the Dutch
1675 - Royal Observatory founded at Greenwich
1677 - John Bunyan publishes The Pilgrims Progress.
1678 - The Popish Plot is fabricated by Titus Oates. He alleges a Catho l i c p lot to murder the King and restore Catholicism. The Government ove r - r eacts, and many Catholic subjects are persecuted.
1679 - Exclusion Bill attempts to exclude James, Charles’s Catholic bro t h e r, from the succession.
1679 - Habeas Corpus act passed which forbids imprisonment without tria l
1682 - Pennsylvania founded in America by William Penn
1683 - The Rye House Plot a conspiracy to kill Charles and his brother J a m e s and return to parliamentary rule is uncovered.
1685 - Charles is received into the Roman Catholic Church on his deathb e d . 
1261 I8542  Stuart  James  19 Jun 1566  27 Mar 1625 

King James I ( 1603 - 1625 )

1603 - James VI of Scotland becomes King James I of England, Scotland, a n d I r eland after the death of Elizabeth I uniting the thrones of Scotla n d a n d England.
1603 - The Millenary Petition is presented to James I. It expresses Pur i t a n desires for reforms to the Church of England.
1603 - Plot against James to set his cousin Arabella Stuart on the thro n e . S ir Walter Raleigh is implicated and imprisoned.
1604 - The Somerset House Peace Conference results in peace between Eng l a n d and Spain.
1604 - The Hampton Court Conference fails to settle the doctrinal diffe r e n ces between the Anglican Church and its Puritan critics.
1604 - James proclaims that smoking is harmful to the lungs and imposes a t a x o n t obacco
1605 - Guy Fawkes and other Catholic dissidents attempt to blow up King a n d P a rliament in The Gunpowder Plot. They are betrayed and arrested.
1606 - The Gunpowder plotters are executed. 120 colonists sail for Amer i c a .
1607 - The Earls of Tyrone and Tyrconnel end their rebellion against En g l i sh rule of Ireland and flee to Europe; Ulster is colonized by Protes t a n t settlers from Scotland and England.
1607 - The English Parliament rejects Union with Scotland.
1607 - Common citizenship of English and Scottish persons is granted to t h o s e born after the accession of James VI of Scotland to the English th r o n e.
1607 - Jamestown found in America by the Virginia company
1609 - Scottish and English Protestants are encouraged to settle in Uls t e r
1609 - Shakespeare completes the Sonnets.
1611 - The King James Authorized Version of the Bible is published.
1611 - Dissolution of the first Parliament of James I.
1611 - Arabella Stuart secretly marries William Seymour. When James fin d s o u t Seymour is imprisoned but escapes with Arabella. They are captur e d o n t he way to France and imprisoned in the Tower of London. Arabella s t a r ves herself to death there in 1615.
1612 - Henry, Prince of Wales, dies of typhoid. His younger brother, Ch a r l es, becomes heir to the throne.
1612 - Heretics are burned at the stake for the last time in England.
1613 - James' daughter Elizabeth marries Frederick V, Elector of Palati n e . T heir descendants in House of Hanover will eventually inherit the B r i t ish Throne.
1613 - The Globe Theatre in London burns during a performance of Henry V I I I
1614 - Second Parliament of James I meets.
1614 - Scottish mathematician John Napier publishes his theory of logar i t h ms simplifying calculations for navigators.
1615 - George Villiers becomes James’s favourite.
1616 - Playwright William Shakespeare dies.
1616 - Raleigh is released from prison to lead an expedition to Guiana i n s e a rch of El Dorado
1617 - George Villiers becomes the Earl of Buckingham.
1618 - Raleigh fails in his expedition and on his return is executed fo r a l l eged treason at Westminster.
1620 - The Pilgrim Fathers set sail for America in the Mayflower. They l a n d a t Cape Cod and found New Plymouth.
1625 - Death of James I, aged 58. 
1262 I7451  Stuteville  Nicholas  Abt 1192  Bef 19 Oct 1233 

NICHOLAS II de Stuteville. Recorded in the Pipe Roll at Michaelmas 1209 a s N i c h o las son of Nicholas. After the death of his father he administer ed t h e i n h eritance of his nephew Eustace. Married Dervorguilla, da. of R ol a n d o f G alloway, who brought an interest in Whissendine, Rutland to t h e f a m i ly in frank marriage. 
1263 I45418  Suebering  Lambertje Roelofse  1616  21 Jun 1675 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1264 I45418  Suebering  Lambertje Roelofse  1616  21 Jun 1675 

Lambertje and her husband, Jan Stryker were the first of four families to settle in Midwout, which was later called Flatbush, on Long Island. Jan was an armorer or gunsmith by trade, and was an elder of the Reformed Church of Flatbush while the Rev. Johannes Theodorus Polhemius was building the first church on Long Island in 1654. Jan was also a Magistrate of Midwout in 1654 and again in 1673. He was a member of the Colonel Assembly and a Captain of Kings County Militia. 
1265 I45415  Suebering  Roelof Lukassen  Abt 1596  Abt 1654 

People in the Netherlands in this timeframe did not have last names. They were known by who their father is and had a "last name" that was their father's first name and "sen/son" for the son or "dotter/dater/dochter" if they were a daughter. So "Lukassen" literally means "Son of Lucas". My guess is that someone tagged on the parents "last names" to him also but during the time period was known as just "Roeloff" or "Roeloff Lukassen" 
1266 I7178  Sunifred  Sunyer  Abt 880  15 Oct 954 

He was the son of Wilfred the Hairy and younger brother of the previous c o u n t o f B arcelona, Wilfred II Borrel. He worked jointly with his brothe r i n t h e g o vernment of the counties held by their father after his deat h i n 8 9 7 . H e did not reign independently until his brother's death in 9 11 .

However, on the death of his uncle, Count Radulf I of Besalú, in 913 or 9 2 0 , a c o n flict emerged between Sunyer and his brother Count Miró II of C e r d a n ya over the succession of the County of Besalú. In exchange for th e t o t a l r enunciation of all claims on the County of Barcelona, Sunyer g av e u p h i s c laim on Besalú. In 947 Sunyer retired to monastic life and c e d ed t h e g overnment of his realms to his sons. 
1267 I45070  Sutherland  Kenneth  19 Jul 1333   
Battle of Halidon Hill 
1268 I1696  Swansneck of Mercia  Ealdgyth  Abt 1018  Aft 1070 

Gruffudd married, first, about 1057, as her first husband, Edith (or Ea l d g yth Ealgyth Aldgyth), daughter of Aelfgar (of Elgar), King of Mercia , s o n o f L eofric, son of Leofwine, the earl of Mercia who died before 1032 . H e r g randmother was Lady Godiva. 
1269 I45339  Swart  Jacomintje Jacobse  7 Dec 1638  1706 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1270 I8035  Taillefer  Isabella  1188  31 May 1246 

Isabella was betrothed to Hugh IX de Lusignan when John met her in 1200 . J o h n n e eded a heir and was covetous of the county of Angouleme. John b r u s h e d aside Hugh's protests and married Isabella, an act which brought o n w a r w i t h King Phillip of France (perhaps Phillip used this event as a p r e t e x t). Some have said that it was John's idle dalliance with Isabella w h i c h c a used John to lose his French territories, however, one historian r e l a t e s that "...John was quite capable of losing them without her assis t a n c e ." After John's death in 1215, Isabella went to France where in 12 2 0 s h e m a rried Hugh X de Lusignan, son of her previous betrothed. 
1271 I7145  Taillifer  Guillaume  Abt 970  Sep 1037 

"William III Taillefer (also spelled Tallefer or Tallifer; c. 970 ?? September 1037) was the Count of Toulouse, Albi, and Quercy from 972 or 978 to his death. He was the first of the Toulousain branch of his family to bear the title marchio, which he inherited (c.975) from Raymond II of Rouergue. 
1272 I1210  Talbot  Richard  Abt 1305  Bef 23 Oct 1356 

Richard was the eldest son of Gilbert Talbot, the first Lord Talbot ( 1 2 7 6 ? 1 346), a knight-banneret from Gloucestershire and Herefordshire. On e o f t h a t c ompany of young knights and bannerets who surrounded Edward I I I d u r i ng the years of his greatest victories, Talbot fought in Scotlan d a n d F r a nce, served in the king's household, and presided as a justice . 
1273 I27426  Tanner  William  1660   

William Tanner was an amazing man! He first married Hannah Avis Tibbets i n 1 6 8 6 . T ogether, they had a son named William Henry Tanner (born 1687 a n d h a v i ng the middle name (Henry) in honor of his grandfather, Henry Ti b b e t s ). Shortly after William Henry's birth, Hannah died , leaving Wil l i a m a w i dower, single father of a young boy. Unable to care for the b o y , a n d p rovide for the two of them, William sought a second wife. Will i a m f o u nd a second wife in Mary Babcock, and they were married shortly t h e r e a fter (1690). 
1274 I32158  Teague  Logan  17 Mar 1848  14 Jan 1918 
Age 2 in 1850 census. Can't find any of Age 2 in 1850 census. Can't find any of his children in the 1900 or 1910 Tulare Co. census records. 
1275 I45274  Teller  Helena  13 Oct 1645  20 Nov 1706 
Fort Orange 
1276 I45274  Teller  Helena  13 Oct 1645  20 Nov 1706 

Helena Teller is d/o Willem TELLER and Margaret DONCKESEN, born in Fort Orange in 1645. She married thrice. Her first husband was Cornelis Bogardus, son the Rev. Everardus Bogardus. After his death, she married Jan Hendrickse VanBaal. After his death, she married Francois Rombout, mayor of New York City in 1679-80. He purchased a large tract of land from the Wappingers Indians, known as the Rombout Patent, in what is now part of Dutchess County, NY. Legend has it that Francois bargained for "all the land he could see" for the agreed price, and then climbed to the top of Mount Beacon to claim his property. Helena had children by all three husbands.
Widowed in 1682. 08 Apr 1682 Living on the Princegracht near Elandstraat at Amsterdam preparing to return to New Netherland. She died in 1707. 
1277 I45270  Teller  William  1620  27 May 1701 

He was born in Holland in 1620. He came to New Amsterdam, 1639, went to Fort Orange (now Albany, NY), as a Corporal, advanced to Wachtmeester (quartermaster) of the fort. Albany 1639-92. Trader, moved to NYC, 1692. One of the first 5 patentees of Schenectady, 1684, (Gov Dongan) though he probably never lived there. He had 5 bouweries and a village lot (Union and Washington Sts).

The only clue to his origins is that he was said to be "of Hitlant" in his marriage record. That was a Dutch name for the Shetland Islands. There were documented Teller families living there at the time, so very possibly his origins will someday be found there. 
1278 I45356  Terhune  Albert Albertse  Abt 1623  Bef 1 Nov 1685 

He signed his name Albert Albertse.

Immigrant ancestor of the Terhunes of New Amsterdam, Flatlands Long Island, and later Bergen County, East New Jersey. The first record we have of the immigrant is in New Amsterdam, on February 16, 1654, when Wolfret Webber brought a suit against Albert Albertse in the burgomasters and schepens court for services of hisson, hired by Albertse. He was recorded as a "lientwever" (ribbonweaver), when he first came to New Amsterdam, and attempted to carryon his trade in the Dutch city. He next appears in 1657 as having rented and cultivated a farm on the Nyack (Najack) tract in New Utrecht, Long Island, owned by Conelius Van Werckhoven and held for the heirs of the estate of Jaques Cortelyou. He evidently built a rude home. This home after the custom of the early Dutch farmers,consisted of a dugout cellar covered by a heavy thatch of rye straw. A nearby spring was the source of fresh water. From such a house that the Director General and Council of New Amsterdam forced the farmers to leave, after they had either destroyed or unroofed them. He moved his family for safety from the Indians, into the village of New Utrecht, where all isolated settlers were gathered for mutual protection.

This "Garrison Village", as they were called in New England was built in 1660, but not until great opposition on the part of the disturbed farmers, had been overcome by force of law. It is recorded of Albert Albertse that he was fined fifty guilders by the Director General and Council of New Amsterdam for non-conformity with the orders of the government. When he refused to pay he was imprisoned until he agreed to join in the erection of the village of New Utrecht. He became the owner of one of the first twelve houses built in the village, which shows that he was not only a tardy or rebellious settler. The same year he became a land owner by purchasing fifty acres of land from Jacob Van Couwenhoven in the village of Flatlands. 
1279 I45357  Terhune  Jan Albertse  Abt 1654  Aft 1731 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1280 I45359  Terhune  Roelof Janse  Abt 1686  Bef 30 Apr 1761 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery

Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1281 I45359  Terhune  Roelof Janse  Abt 1686  Bef 30 Apr 1761 

Roelof Terhune and Maritjtie Gerrits were married 5 May 1706 in New Amersfort, Kings County, New York (Flatbush Church Records, page 281).

Roelof and his brother, Albert married sisters VOORHEES !!! daughters of Garret Court Van Voorhees and his wife Willemptje Pieterse Luyster

http://olivetreegenealogy.com/nn/church/flatlands1.shtml

Roelof and his brother, Albert married sisters VOORHEES !!! http://olivetreegenealogy.com/nn/church/flatlands1.shtml 
1282 I43897  the Bavarian  Louis  1 Apr 1282  11 Oct 1347 

Louis IV (German: Ludwig; 1 April 1282 - 11 October 1347), called the B a v a rian (Ludwig der Bayer, Latin: Ludovicus Bavarus), was King of the R o m a ns from 1314, King of Italy from 1327, and Holy Roman Emperor from 1 3 2 8 u ntil his death in 1347.

Louis' election as king of Germany in 1314 was controversial, as his Ha b s b urg cousin Frederick the Fair was simultaneously elected king by a s e p a rate set of electors. Louis defeated Frederick in the Battle of Mühl d o r f in 1322, and the two eventually reconciled. Louis was opposed and e x c o mmunicated by the French Pope John XXII; Louis in turn attempted to d e p o se the pope and install an anti-pope.

Louis IV was Duke of Upper Bavaria from 1294 to 1301 together with his e l d e r brother Rudolf I, was Margrave of Brandenburg until 1323, and Coun t P a l atine of the Rhine until 1329, and became Duke of Lower Bavaria in 1 3 4 0 . He was the last Bavarian to be a king of Germany until 1742. He be c a m e Count of Hainaut, Holland, Zeeland, and Friesland in 1345 when his w i f e M argaret inherited those domains. 
1283 I7100  The Staller  Ralph  Abt 1020  1070 

Ralph the Staller or Ralf the Englishman (died 1069/70) was a noble and landowner in both Anglo-Saxon and post-Conquest England. He first appears in charters from Brittany, where he was described as Ralph / Ralf the Englishman, and it was in Brittany that his son Ralph de Gaël held a large hereditary lordship.

The exact nature of his connections to England and Brittany are uncertain. Although he was clearly present in England before 1066 his name Ralph (Radulphus, Ralf, Rauf, Raoul etc.) was continental, and not English. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle contrasts him with his unnamed wife (whom it describes as a Breton), saying that he was born in Norfolk, while both the Norman writer William of Malmesbury and the chronicle of the abbey of Saint-Riquier in France (where he made a grant) describe Ralph the staller as a Breton. Modern historians such as Ann Williams have suggested that his father came to England with Emma of Normandy when she married Aethelred II in 1002. She suggest that his mother was English, thus accounting for relatives with Anglo-Saxon names, mentioned in Domesday Book. 
1284 I45266  Thorne  Hannah  Abt 1695  23 Aug 1771 
First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery
First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery 
1285 I45266  Thorne  Hannah  Abt 1695  23 Aug 1771 
Bp.31Jan1911. Bp.31Jan1911. 
1286 I45250  Thorne  William  Abt 1616  12 May 1664 
Thorne-Wilkins Cemetery Fort Totten Park 
1287 I45250  Thorne  William  Abt 1616  12 May 1664 

The Puritan Great Migration.
William Thorne Sr. migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640). (See The Directory, by R. C. Anderson, p. 334)

William Thorn migrated from England in 1637 residing first in Lynn, Massachusetts Bay Colony then moving to Long Island, settling first in Gravesend, then Flushing and finally in Jamaica, New York. His eventual residence in New York qualifies him for "Beyond New England" status in the Puritan Great Migration project. He may have been a Quaker late in life, as he was a signatory of the "Flushing Remonstrance" of 1657 (see "Colonial Life"). However, not all of the signatories WERE Quakers so William's religion is not certain.

His birth is sometimes quoted as 1617 or 1617, likely to make him 21 by the time he was a freeman of Lynn. However, this status typically indicated an older man who owned property and was a member of the church with some standing in society so likely he was considerably more than 21 in 1638.
His wife is called Susannah Booth, of unknown origins on wikitree. The work of Arthur Eaton cited here[3] proved that her first name was Susannah, but said her last name was unknown.

In a followup 1965 NYGBR article her last name is stated as "Booth" and her origin (and their date and place of marriage) are specifically stated as "unknown". Her last name of "Booth" is derived from genealogical work done by two genealogists (John Ross Delafield and his father Maturin Livingston Delafield) who claimed to have had an account of William Hallett stating that his alimony payment (to his ex-wife Susan, widow of William Thorn) was to be paid to "Susannah Both". No such name has been found subsequently in any original document, but Dickinson holds the Delafields in high regard and gives credence to this statement of Susannah's original surname.

Her first name (and marriage first to Thorn, then to Hallett) however is well established by these June 1669 New York court records from the legal separation of Susanna Hallett and her husband William noting a subsequent alimony suit where Susannah Hallet's son, Joseph Thorne took an active part.

Torrey in "New England Marriages to 1700" sheds no additional light on the marriage of William Thorn and Susannah and makes no claim to her last name. 
1288 I7468  Thouars  Aimery  Abt 1017  1093 

Among those who took part in the battle of Hastings. The Chronique de N o r m a n die, based on le Roman de Rou, names "le Viconte de Thouars" and " A l m a u ry de Thouars" among those who took part in the conquest of Englan d i n 1 0 6 6 . The Chronicon sancti Florentii Salmurensis records the deat h i n 1 0 9 3 o f "Aimericus vicecomes Toarcensis" and his donation of "Casa m" . 
1289 I7256  Thuathail  Mor Ui  1114  10 May 1191 

Mor Ingen O'Toole, in Irish Mor Ui Thuathail (c.1114- 1191), was a Quee n - c o n sort of Leinster as the principal first wife of King Dermot MacMur c h a d a . Under Brehon Law, Irish kings were allowed more than one wife. K i n g D e r mot's second wife was Sadhbh Ni Fhaolain.

Mor Ingen O'Toole, in Irish Mor Ui Thuathail (c.1114- 1191), was a Quee n - c o n sort of Leinster as the principal first wife of King Dermot MacMur c h a d a . Under Brehon Law, Irish kings were allowed more than one wife. K i n g D e r mot's second wife was Sadhbh Ni Fhaolain. 
1290 I22220  Tilley  Elizabeth  Bef 30 Aug 1607  21 Dec 1687 

mtDNA HAPLOGROUP: H1a1

Elizabeth Tilley came on the Mayflower, at the age of about thirteen, with her parents John and Joan (Hurst) Tilley. Her parents, and her aunt and uncle Edward and Agnes Tilley, all died the first winter, leaving her orphaned in the New World. She soon married, about 1624 or 1625, to fellow Mayflower passenger John Howland, who had come as a manservant, or apprentice, to Governor John Carver who died in April 1621.

John and Elizabeth Howland raised a large family with ten children, all of whom lived to adulthood and married. As a result, they likely have more descendants living today than any other Mayflower passengers. Some of their descendants include Franklin D. Roosevelt; both President Bush's; actors Alec and Stephen Baldwin, Humphrey Bogart, Christopher Lloyd; Mormon church founder Joseph Smith; poet Ralph Waldo Emerson; and Doctor Benjamin Spock. 
1291 I10324  Tilley  John  15 Dec 1571  Between Jan and Mar 1621 

DEATH: Sometime the first winter at Plymouth, likely between January and March 1621.
Surprisingly little is known about John Tilley. He was born in 1571 at Henlow, co. Bedford, England, and his brother Edward Tilley and wife Agnes (along with their neice and nephew Humility Cooper and Henry Samson) also came on the Mayflower. Brother Edward is known to have lived in Leiden, but there is no record of John Tilley there (though it is certainly possible he was present there and just didn't get named in any record). John and Joan Tilley came on the Mayflower with their youngest child, Elizabeth, then about thirteen years old. Both John Tilley and wife Joan died the first winter at Plymouth, but their daughter Elizabeth survived and later married fellow Mayflower passenger John Howland. 
1292 I7134  Toeni  Ralph  Abt 930  1015 

Ralph received Toeni from his elder brother Hugh, Archbishop of Rouen ( D e c e m ber 942). He is described as a most powerful man, perhaps in cons e q u e n ce of that gift. He is usually confused with his son Ralph, but th e r e i s n o a uthority for such identification, and the dates involved sho w t h a t t h ere must have been two Ralphs, belonging to successive generat io n s . 
1293 I7461  Toeni  Ralph  Abt 1190  Abt 29 Sep 1239 

Roger de Tosny provided his 4-year-old son Roger as a hostage to effect t h e r e l e ase of King Richard as a prisoner in Germany.

1204, Ralph, his father, and some of his brothers, were excluded by the K i n g o f F r ance from the terms of the pacification in Normandy. 
1294 I7608  Toeni  Rodulf  Bef 970  Aft 1015 

Said to be descended from Malahucius, brother of the father of Rollo.
Ralph/Rodulf de Toeni; feudal Lord also of Conches; custodian with his s o n o f C a s tle of Tillieres from 1013 to 1014; took part in Norman expedi t i on t o S o uthern Italy c1015. [Burke's Peerage]
RALPH (or RODULF) DE TOENI II, son and heir, was born probably before 9 7 0 , f o r i n 1013 or 1014 the Duke of Normandy, having founded the castle o f T i l l i ï ¿ ½ res, gave the custody of it to Ralph de Toeni and his son R o g e r , t ogether with Neel, Vicomte of the Cotentin. Ralph was seigneur o f T o s n i a nd Conches. ) About 1015 he went to Apulia; and in the winter o f 1 0 1 5 - 16 he was at the siege of Salerno. 
1295 I7452  Toeni  Roger  Abt 990  31 May 1039 

ROGER DE TOENI I, styled also de Conches. He was a powerful and haughty m a n , a n d b a nner-bearer of all Normandy. In 1031 or 1032 he attested a c h art e r o f R obert I for St. Wandrille. About 1035 he founded the abbey o f C h a t i llon or Conches. While Duke Robert was away on pilgrimage, he we nt t o S p a i n and distinguished himself in fighting the infidels. When he r e tu r n e d to Normandy, he was furious to learn that the boy William had s u c c e e ded his father in the Duchy, declaring that a bastard ought not to r u l e o v e r him and other Normans. Accordingly he rebelled and ravaged the l a n d s o f h is neighbours, particularly those of Humphrey de Vieilles; who s e s o n R o ger de Beaumont marched against him, and in the battle which f o l l o w ed Roger de Toeni and two of his sons were slain. 
1296 I7155  Toulouse  Ermengaud  Abt 870  937 

Ermengol (or Ermengaud) (870-937) was a son of Odo of Toulouse and Gars i n d i s . His father gave him the County of Rouergue and Quercy in 906 and h e g o v e r ned it to his death. His brother was Raymond II of Toulouse and t o g e t h er they governed the vast patrimony of their house in the first ha l f o f t h e t enth century.

Ermengol and his wife Adelais (Adalaiz) had two known sons and one daug h t e r , t hough charters of his eldest son indicate that he had other sons b e s i d e s his two heirs. The eldest son was Raymond, who inherited Rouergu e , a n d t h e second was Hugh, who received Quercy. His daughter is hypoth e s i z e d to have married Sunifred II, Count of Barcelona. 
1297 I7129  Toulouse  Raymond  Abt 815  Bef 17 Apr 865 

Raymond I (died 865) was the Count of Limoges (from 841), Rouergue and Q u e r c y ( from 849), and Toulouse and Albi (from 852). He was the younger s o n o f F u l coald of Rouergue and Senegund, niece of William of Gellone th r o ug h h i s sister Alda.

In 852, on the death of his brother Fredelo, Raymond, already count of L i m o g e s, Quercy, and Rouergue, received Toulouse and Albi. In 862, he wa s a t t a c ked by Humfrid, Count of Barcelona, and forced to abdicate Limog es . I n 8 6 3 , he was likewise forced to abdicate Rouergue and Toulouse. H e d i e d i n 8 65 while fighting for his possessions against the new count S u n i f r ed 
1298 I27327  Towne  Mary  Bef 14 Aug 1634   

We know but little of her life till 1692, when that terrible witchcraft d e l u s i on spread over Salem Village and vicinity. Among those to fall a v i c t i m w as Mary Esty. Her sister Rebecca Nurse, about thirteen years old e r , h a d p reviously been accused, ISAAC ESTY AND SOME OF HIS DESCENDANTS . f o u n d guilty and executed July 19, 1692. Mary Esty was arrested April 2 1 , 1 6 9 2, kept in jail till May 18, when she was released. On May 21, a s e c o n d w arrant was procured and she was taken from her home at midnight, c a r r i e d to Salem jail and placed in chains. She was tried, found guilty a n d c o n d emned to death, and on the 22nd of September, 1692, she was exec u t e d w i th seven others.She was the mother of nine children, a woman of s o u n d j u dgment and exalted Christian character. She asked not for her o w n l i f e ; only that other innocent blood might not be shed, and for thi s u n c o n sciousness of self has been called " the self-forgetful." 
1299 I45431  Trico  Catalyntje Jeronimus  1605  11 Sep 1689 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1300 I45431  Trico  Catalyntje Jeronimus  1605  11 Sep 1689 

The genealogy of this family has for years followed the fabricated line of some 19th Century Genealogist. 2. The true line was proved by Hugh Law in his book: SLC FHLC 940 D2hl, Chapter 7 is entitled: Ancestors traced to France: Joris Jansen de Rapalje & Catherine Trico. Parish records from her home town don't begin for many years after the birth of Catherine Trico, but there are many Trico families living in the area. At her marriage in Amsterdam, Holland, she gives the place of her birth. She was 18 at the time of her marriage. Her sister Mary Flamengh accompanied her.

In a deposition in 17 Oct 1688 Catalynie states she was 83 years of age, born in Paris France, She came to this country in the Ship Unity in 1623, commanded by Adrian Jorise arrived in Albany New York and after 2 years moved to New Amsterdam (New York City) !Birth place: She states in 1680 as born in Paris France. On her marriage intents her place of birth Prais France is lined out and Pris in Walslant is written in. Further research verifies that Pris in Walslant is correct. !FATHER: these two sources list her father as Joris Trico: 1. Reg. of Early Settlers of Kings Co., Long Island, N.Y. by. Bergen, Teunis G.; SPL R929.1747 B453R pg 326; 2. Gen. & Family History of Southern New York by Cutter, SPL. R929.1747 C981G pg 830

George E. McCracken, "Catalyntje Trico Rapalje", The American Genealogist vol.35 (1959): 35:193.
Dorothy A. Koening, "Further Information About Catalina Trico", New Netherland Connections Vol.1, page 89 (1996): pages 91-92.

About Catalyntje (Catherine)
"From the Journal of Dankers & Sluter, Labadists [a 17th century religious sect] who visited this country in 1678: On May 30, 1679, they visited Catalynie. "M. deLaGrange and his wife invited me to accompany them in their boat to the Walebocht, a place situated on Long Island, an hour's distance below the city and opposite Corlears Heock. The aunt of de LaGrange (Catalynie Trico) is an old Walloon. She is wordly-minded, living with her whole heart, as well as body, among her progeny, which now numbers 145 and will soon reach 150. Nevertheless, she lived alone by herself, a little apart from the others, having her little garden and other conveniences with which she helped herself."

Source: The Vandaveer Family of Greene County, Illinois by Frederick Ewart Vandaveer, West Side Blue, Inc., Fairview Park, Ohio, 1970, page 32, citing the journals of Jasper Dankers and Peter Sluyter,1679-1683, unknown publication information. 
1301 I40110  Tudor  Henry  28 Jan 1457  21 Apr 1509 

Henry VII (28 January 1457 - 21 April 1509) was King of England and Lor d o f I r e l and from his seizure of the crown on 22 August 1485 until his d e at h i n 1 5 09. He was the first monarch of the House of Tudor.

Henry's mother, Margaret Beaufort, was a descendant of John of Gaunt, f o u n d e r of the House of Lancaster and son of King Edward III. Henry's fa t h e r , E dmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond, a half-brother of Henry VI of E n g l a n d and a member of the Welsh Tudors of Penmynydd, died three months b e f o r e h is son Henry was born. During Henry's early years, his uncle Hen r y V I w a s f ighting against Edward IV, a member of the Yorkist branch of t h e H o u s e of Plantagenet. After Edward retook the throne in 1471, Henry T u d o r s p ent 14 years in exile in Brittany. He attained the throne when h i s f o r c es, supported by France, Scotland, and Wales, defeated Richard I I I a t t h e B attle of Bosworth Field, the culmination of the Wars of the R o s e s . H e was the last king of England to win his throne on the field of b a t t l e . He cemented his claim by marrying Elizabeth of York, daughter of E d w a r d I V. 
1302 I8089  Tudor  Margaret  28 Nov 1489  18 Oct 1541 

James IV's marriage in 1503 to Margaret Tudor linked the royal houses o f S c o t l and and England. It led to the Union of the Crowns in 1603, when E l i z a b eth I died without heirs and James IV's great-grandson James VI su c c e e d ed to the English throne as James I. 
1303 I3937  Tudor Stuart  Mary  16 Oct 1673  5 Nov 1726 
Mary was born on 16 October 1673, to Moll Davis and Charles II, and was the last of the king’s children.

She grew up surrounded by the high society of the Restoration - nobles, thespians, dramatists, artists, and poets - and, following in her mother’s footsteps, she began acting at a young age. She was part of performances put on at Charles II’s court; aged nine years old she sang the part of Cupid alongside her mother (who was starring as Venus) in the play Venus and Adonis.

On 10 December 1680, Mary, aged seven, received her title from the king in recognition of her paternity. She was granted the name Lady Mary Tudor, as a nod to their collateral descent from the Tudor family, and a few years later in September 1683, she was issued an annuity of £1500.

She was married at aged fourteen, young even by seventeenth century standards, to Viscount Edward Radclyffe, who later inherited the earldom of Derwentwater, making Lady Mary the Countess of Derwentwater. They had four children together, James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater, Lady Mary Tudor Radclyffe, Charles Radclyffe, and Hon. Francis Radclyffe. Mary and Edward separated around 1700, possibly because he was Roman Catholic and she refused to convert to the religion.

Two of Mary and Edward’s sons, James and Charles, were Jacobites and joined the rising of 1715. They were both captured, tried for treason and sentenced to death. Charles managed to escape prison and fled to France where he regrouped with the Stuarts, but James was not so lucky. Mary, along with several other nobles including Duchess of Cleveland petitioned George I to release James, but the king was determined to make an example of the rebels, and James was beheaded on Tower Hill in 1716. 
1304 I9352  Turner  John  Bef 24 Mar 1621  Aft 20 May 1697  Little is known about John Turner and his family. They all died the first winter at Plymouth, likely between January and March 1621. John Turner was a merchant living in Leiden, and was granted citizenship there on 27 September 1610, making him one of the earliest members of the Pilgrim congregation to get his citizenship there. 
1305 I1145  Tyssinck  Hilletje  1630  Abt 1665 

Registered living in Fort Orange in 1643.

Per "The settlers of Rensselaerwyck" by Van Laer Innone place Elletie is called Peter Bronks widow in 1670 and she lived on the west side of the Hudson river next to the brewery that Pieter sold to Jacob Henrick and Reyndert Pieterz in 1661 and 1662. In another she is called Hilletie Tyssinck, widow of Pieter Bronck, she gave two scheppels of wheat to the church in 1669. 
1306 I45206  Underhill  John  Abt 1608  21 Jul 1672 
Underhill Cemetery 
1307 I45206  Underhill  John  Abt 1608  21 Jul 1672 

He came with John Winthrop and his 900 immigrants to Boston in 1630. After successfully fighting the Indians in New England the Dutch Government invited him to come to New Amsterdam in 1649 to help them. In 1653 the MA Goverment allowed him and Capt. Edward Hull to come and fight the Indians in Long Island. In 1657 he bought a place in 1657 at Southold and in 1658 bought his family there in 1658. His wife, whom he had married in Holland, died soon after and he sold out and moved west and settled at Oysterbay which he named Kenilworth 
1308 I7885  Urgel  Sunifred  Abt 810  849 

He established himself as count in the area known as the "March of Spai n " , s o u th of the Pyrenees. He apparently led a revolt of the indigenou s [ V i s i gothic] population against Bernard de Septimanie (father of Bern ar d " P l a ntevelue"). He conquered Cerdanya and Urgell in the 830's, che c ki n g t h e Moorish expansion. "Suniefredus" donated property to Urgell b y c h a r t er dated 3 Jan 840. He was killed in a counter-attack by Guilla um e , s o n o f Bernard de Septimanie, in 849. 
1309 I45457  Van Der Werven  Catharina  1622  1702 
Flatbush Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1310 I45457  Van Der Werven  Catharina  1622  1702 

Catharina and Johannes were married circa 1643 and their first five children were born in Brazil. By 1654, the Dutch administration in Brazil had become inefficient and corrupt. The Portuguese revolted and the Dutch were given three months to depart Brazil or embrace the Roman Catholic faith and become Portuguese citizens. They declined. The Dutch sent 16 ships to Brazil to evacuate the settlers. Catherine and the children left on one and Johannes stayed to depart on the last ship. Catherine and the children were in dire need. On arriving she had approached the Lutheran Church officials and explained what had happened and that without her husband she had no means to provide for herself and family. They doled out small amounts of money and kept her in poverty for a year or more before finally deciding that they would pay her passage so that she and the children could rejoin Johannes in Flatbush. The family was reunited in 1656-1657. Another son, Snebering, was added to the family the following year with two more to follow. 
1311 I45372  van Barkelo  Harmon Jans Lubberijnck  Abt 1626  12 Nov 1694 

They came from the small town of Borculo in the province of Gelderland in what was formerly the County of Zutphen, and hence assumed the name of Berckelo (Barkelo). Lubberdinck is a farmstead on which they resided for several generations. It is located southeast of Geesteren. When they came to America, this very local name was superceded by van Borculoo. From research done by Helen Barricklow Endecott and her brother Rex Barricklow in 1964: There were two pioneers in New Netherlands, Willem Jans van Barkelo, (who had already lived in New Netherlands) with brother Harmon Jans van Barkelo emigrated on the ship De Trouw (The Faith) sailed from Holland March 24, 1662. They came from the town of Borculo in the province of Guelderland. Harmen Jans brought wife Willempje Warnaers and 2 children, 5 and 3 years old. He died at New Utrecht (now Brooklyn) New York. 
1312 I45373  Van Barkeloo  Willem Harmense  Abt 1666  1725 
Event Description: Barkaloo Cemetery 
1313 I9604  van Billung  Oda  Bef 806  17 May 913 

About 830 Liudolf married Oda, daughter of a Frankish princeps named Bi l l u n g a nd his wife Aeda. By marrying a Frankish nobleman's daughter, Li u d o l f f ollowed suggestions set forth by Charlemagne about ensuring the i n t e g r ity of the Carolingian Empire in the aftermath of the Saxon Wars t h r o u g h marriage. Oda died on 17 May 913, supposedly at the age of 107.

In 845/846, Liudolf and Oda traveled to Rome in order to ask Pope Sergi u s I I f o r p ermission to found a house of secular canonesses, duly estab l i sh e d a t their proprietary church in Brunshausen around 852, and moved i n 8 8 1 t o f o rm Gandersheim Abbey. Liudolf and Oda 's minor daughter Hat hu m o d b e came the first abbess. 
1314 I7892  Van Brabant  Jan  20 Oct 1299  5 Dec 1355 

He is married to (1) Marie d'Evreux on January 19, 1311 at à vreux, Eur e , H a u t e-Normandie, France, he was 11 years old. 
1315 I8396  Van Brabant  Mathilde  12 Jun 1224  29 Sep 1288 

In 1279 Henrik, landgrave of Hesse renounced all his rights on the duch y o f b r a b an in favour of Jan I, witnessed by his sisters Mathilde, coun te ss o f A r t ois and Saint-Pol, and Beatrix, lady of Kortrijk, and his ne p hew s R o b ert, count of Artois, Jan of Hainaut and Henrik, lord of Herst a l 
1316 I45127  Van Brunt  Adrian  17 Nov 1735  18 Sep 1785 
State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Captain SAR Patriot #: P-309264 DAR #: A117245
Qualifying Service Description: Captain, NY Militia, 1775

Additional References:
NJ State Archives, Genealogy of Van Brunt Family, Vol I, pg 286 NY Rev Papers, Vol I, pg 431 Mather, Refugees of Long Island, pg 1013

1775- Was a captain of the militia of the town favoring seperation from Britain
1776-took the oath to Gen. Howe of allegiance to keep his family from suffering. During the war he and his brother, Rutgert, were arrested for not turning in those who captured British officers from Flatbush, but no proof was found against them and they were released.

He was a leading man in the town as his name appears at the head of many committees.

SAR Patriot #: P-309264
State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Captain DAR #: A117245 Qualifying Service Description: Captain, NY Militia, 1775

1775- Was a captain of the militia of the town favoring seperation from Britain
1776-took the oath to Gen. Howe of allegiance to keep his family from suffering. during the war he and his brother, Rutgert, were arrested for not turning in those who captured British officers from Flatbush, but no proof was found against them and they were released. He was a leading man in the town as his name appears at the head of many committees. 
1317 I45482  Van Brunt  Cornelis Rutgerse  28 Dec 1664  1748 
New Utrecht Cemetery, 16th Avenue & 84th Street

Event Description: New Utrecht Cemetery, 16th Avenue & 84th Street 
1318 I45482  Van Brunt  Cornelis Rutgerse  28 Dec 1664  1748 

Cornelius, son of Rutger, was a farmer, and lived and died at New Utrecht. Besides the land inherited from his father, he acquired considerable real estate at Gravesend and at New Utrecht. He was highly respected for his integrity and good judgement.
He married December 18, 1685, Tryntje (Catharine) a daughter of Adrain Williamsen Bennet, of Gowanus, now a part of Brooklyn City) and died about 1748.

Cornelius, son of Rutger, was a farmer, and lived and died at New Utrecht. Besides the land inherited from his father, he acquired considerable real estate at Gravesend and at New Utrecht. He was an Elder in Dutch Church of New Utrecht from 171 5 to 1731, a member of the Colonial Legislature of New York from 1698 to 1731, and a justice of the Peace in Kings County from 1712 to 1718. He was highly respected for his integrity and good judgement. He married December 18, 1685, Tryntje (Cath arine) a daughter of Adrain Williamsen Bennet, of Gowanus, now a part of Brooklyn City) and died about 1748. 
1319 I45540  Van Brunt  Elizabeth  10 Dec 1768  1 Jul 1855 
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S38@
PAGE "New York, State Census, 1855", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX : Sat Mar 09 14:07:51 UTC 2024), Entry for Elizabeth Vanderveer and Maria Vanderveer, 1855.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:K6W7-BPX
SOUR: SOUR @S37@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW : Tue Jan 14 22:44:56 UTC 2025), Entry for Elizabeth Vanderveer and Maria Vanderveer, 1850.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-5SW 
1320 I45481  Van Brunt  Rutger Joesten  1633  19 Dec 1721 
New Utrecht Cemetery, 16th Avenue & 84th Street 
1321 I45481  Van Brunt  Rutger Joesten  1633  19 Dec 1721 

Rutger Joesten Van Brunt, came from Holland in 1653 and was the common ancestor of the Van Brunt's in America. He was among the first settlers in New Utrecht on Long Island in 1657 and a farmer by occupation. The most plaussible deriviation for the name is from Brunt a local name near Dreumel in the province of Gelderland, in that part called Neder-Betuwe.
He married for his first wife, Tryntje (Caterine) Claes, the widow of Stoffel Harmensen Van Borculo (now Barkalow) and had by her three son, Nicholas, Joost (or George), and Cornelius. 
1322 I45485  Van Brunt  Rutgert Cornelius  11 Dec 1682  7 Apr 1760 
The Van Voorhees family Vol 1 The First Four Generations by Albert Stokes They lived at new Utrecht where he was a farmer. He owned several valuable properties. Rutgert was a deacon in the reformed Church at new Utrecht 1717-1723 and an elder fro m 1726 to 1729. He was Captain of Militia 1716 and Colonel in 1740. His will is dated 4 Apr 1760 and probated 9 May 1760. 
1323 I45489  Van Cleef  Jan Cornelissen  1627  1699 
New Utrecht Cemetery, 16th Avenue & 84th Street 
1324 I45489  Van Cleef  Jan Cornelissen  1627  1699 

Jan Van Cleef, born in 1627, is said to have been from Cleef, Holland. Land was at a premium and there was little room to expand. He immigrated to America in 1653 with promises of jobs and free land. New Amsterdam was a 17th-century Dutch settlement established at the southern tip of Manhattan Island, which was a forested virgin wilderness, inhabited by native Americans and small groups of European settlers, who navigated not by roads or even forest paths but by the watery highways of the region: the Hudson, Delaware Rivers, etc.. He was among early settlers who spoke some 10 languages, helping develop North America’s first multicultural city. There was plentiful hunting and on his farm he could grow a wide array of garden crops to be sold in local markets. Fort Amsterdam contained the Dutch Reformed Church, a tavern and a strategic port. New Amsterdam was renamed New York on September 8, 1664, in honor of the then Duke of York (later James II of England), in whose name the English had captured it. In 1667 the Dutch gave up their claim to the town and the rest of the colony, in exchange for control of the Spice Islands in the East Indies. 
1325 I45497  van Cleef  Rebecca  1672  15 Nov 1755 
Event Description: Dutch Reformed Church 
1326 I45497  van Cleef  Rebecca  1672  15 Nov 1755 
Dutch Reformed Church 
1327 I45464  van Couwenhoven  Gerret Wolfertse  Abt 1610  Abt 1645 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1328 I45464  van Couwenhoven  Gerret Wolfertse  Abt 1610  Abt 1645 

Came to New Amsterdam with his parents in 1625; settled at New Amsterdam; bought a land patent next to his father in 1638, and thus became a freeholder of Nieuw Amsterdam; wounded trying to drive Indians from t Lange Eylandt about 1643; later that year Iroquois Indians laid waste Dutch settlements there except for the palisaded brick homes of Gerret and his father. 
1329 I45429  Van Couwenhoven  Jan Gerritsen  Abt 1639  Abt 1724 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1330 I45469  van Couwenhoven  Marritje Gerritse  Bef 10 Apr 1644  Between 1702 and 1709 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1331 I45354  Van Couwenhoven  Neeltje Gerritse  Bef 20 Sep 1641  Abt 1672 
Dutch Reformed Church 
1332 I45354  Van Couwenhoven  Neeltje Gerritse  Bef 20 Sep 1641  Abt 1672 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1333 I45354  Van Couwenhoven  Neeltje Gerritse  Bef 20 Sep 1641  Abt 1672 

Neeltje Gerritse Van Cowenhoven, daughter of Gerrit Wolfertse Van Cowenhoven, was the first wife of Roelof Martense Schenck. They married in 1660. She was the mother of six of Roelof's chidlren, and she died about 1674.

THE VAN VOORHEES FAMILY IN AMERICA, The First Six Generations, compiled and edited by Florence A. Cristoph, published by the Van Voorhees Association, 2000, on page 17, entry 24, and on page 25, entry 31. 
1334 I45534  Van Der Veer  Jan Cornelise  1671  23 Nov 1732  Old Newtown Cemetery 
1335 I45534  Van Der Veer  Jan Cornelise  1671  23 Nov 1732 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1336 I45534  Van Der Veer  Jan Cornelise  1671  23 Nov 1732  Old Newtown Cemetery 
1337 I45346  Van Duyn  Cornelis  Sep 1724  24 Mar 1796 
Resided on and owned the Vankerk farm, late of Cornelius Bennet, the dwelling house being located in Flatbush. He was probably the Cornelius in Flatbush Census of 1790, one son over 16, wife & two daughters, 8 slaves. 
1338 I45340  Van Duyn  Gerrett Cornellisen  1632  14 Jun 1706 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1339 I45340  Van Duyn  Gerrett Cornellisen  1632  14 Jun 1706 

Came to America from Zealand, Holland in 1649, and settled in Newtown, Long Island. He was a carpenter and wheelright.

An article listed as "Hudson and Bergen County" states that Gerrit bought land at Flatbush and served as a magistrate in 1687-88 and a justice in 1689-90 and that he died in 1705. 
1340 I45347  Van Duyn  Jackomyntie  27 Aug 1748  12 Sep 1828 
Dutch Church 
1341 I45366  Van Duyn  Neeltje  1630  Dec 1695 

Neeltje and her brother Gerritt Cornelisae Van Duyn came to America in 1649 without their parents. She joined the church at New Utrecht in March 1679. 
1342 I45342  Van Duyne  Cornelius Gerretse  16 Jul 1664  27 Sep 1754 

Taken from the "ANNALS OF NEWTOWN" by James Riker. Cornelius Van Duyn, son of Gerrit, was b. July 16, 1664, at New Utrecht, m. Jan. 29, 1691, Matilda, dau. of Wm. Huyken, and the next year removed to Gowanus, in Brooklyn, of which town he was afterwards a trustee. His wife dying Mar. 1, 1709, in her 40th yr., he m. Christiana Gerbrands, June 14, 1714. He d. in 1754, leaving, besides daughters, sons Gerrit, b. Sep. 6, 1691: William b. Mar. 26, 1693, and Cornelius, b. Feb. 12, 1709, who d. in Brooklyn at an advanced age, without issue.

He bore the character of an energetic, business man, but was remarkable for his humor. When the Revolutionary troubles began, he inclined to the whig couse, but finally espoused that of the king, served as a captain of militia under the British, and at the peace retired with his family to Nova Scotia, where he died. 
1343 I45476  Van Dyck  Angnietje Jans  Bef 16 Jun 1644  Aft 7 Apr 1719 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1344 I45473  Van Dyke  Jan Thomasse  Abt 1609  16 Oct 1673 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1345 I45473  Van Dyke  Jan Thomasse  Abt 1609  16 Oct 1673 

Came to New Utrecht in 1652 with the ship De Bonte Koe ("Spotted Cow"). One of the founders of New Utrecht granted patent of land by the Governor and Council of Fort Amsterdam 16 Jan 1657. In 1659 he added to the first estate a tract of meadowland near what is now called Coney Island, commissioned Sergeant of New Utrecht by the Director - General and Council 2 Oct 1659.
Based on the Baptismal records of Jan Thomasse (Van Dyke) before he and his family came to New Amsterdam and found out that he changed his name to Van Dyke. Actually, he only used the name Jan Thomasse. It was his posterity that used the Van Dyke name. The name he went by in Amsterdam, according to the records of the Old Church of Amsterdam was Guecke/Gelcken/Guertsz/Goiken/Gueken/Geucksz. This is also well documented in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record Vol. 126, #4, Oct. 1995. 
1346 I7771  Van Egmond  John  1385  4 Jan 1451 

His life was marked by great unrest, and his reign over Egmond by great c o n t r o versy with the abbots of the Abbey. He was buried in Egmond, and h i s s o n m a de them build a metal tomb in honor. 
1347 I7888  Van Egmond Of Guelders  Mary  17 Jan 1431  1 Dec 1463 

Mary of Guelders (c. 1434 - 1 December 1463) was the queen consort of S c o t l a nd as the wife of King James II of Scotland. She served as regent o f S c o t l and from 1460 to 1463. She was the daughter of Arnold, Duke of G u e l d e rs, and Catherine of Cleves, a great-aunt of Anne of Cleves. She w a s a g r e a t-niece of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy.

Regency
After her husband's death, Mary acted as regent for their son James III o f S c o t l and until her own death three years later. Mary was drawn into t he W a r o f t h e Roses taking place in England at this time. She appointed B i s h op K e nnedy as her chief advisor; their companionship was described a s w e l l - functioning despite the fact that the bishop favoured an allianc e w i t h t h e Lancastrians, while Mary at first wanted to continue playing o f f t h e w a rring parties in England against each other.

Mary went ahead with James II's plan to build a castle on land at Raven s c r a i g, designed to withstand the use of artillery, and lived in it whi l e i t w a s u nder construction until her death.

Trinity College Church
A devout Roman Catholic, Mary founded Trinity College Church ca. 1460 i n m e m o r y of her husband. The church, located in the area now known as E di n b u r gh's Old Town, was demolished in 1848 to make way for Waverley st a t i o n , although it was partia l l y r econstructed on a different site i n 1 8 7 0 u n der the name Trinity Apse. Mary was buried in the church, alth ou g h h e r c offin was moved to Holyrood Abbey in 1848. 
1348 I7784  Van Egmont  Arnold  14 Jul 1410  23 Feb 1473 

Arnold of Egmond (14 July 1410, Egmond-Binnen, North Holland - 23 Febru a r y 1 4 7 3, Grave) was Duke of Guelders, Count of Zutphen. He was son of J o h n I I o f E gmond and Maria van Arkel.

On 11 July 1423, Arnold of Egmond, who was still a boy in years, succee d e d D u k e Reinald IV. Arnold was the grandson of Reinald's sister, Johan n a . A l t hough the Emperor Sigismund had invested the Duke of Berg with t h e d u c h y of Gelders, Arnold retained the confidence of the Estates by e n l a r g ing their privileges, and enjoyed the support of Duke Philip of Bu r g u n d y. Arnold was betrothed, and afterwards united in marriage to Cath e r i n e o f Cleves né e Valois, a niece of Philip of Burgundy. Subseequent l y , h o w ever, Duke Arnold fell out with his ally as to the succession to t h e s e e o f U trecht; whereupon Philip joined with the four chief towns of G u e l d e rs in the successful attempt of Arnold's son Adolf to substitute h i s o w n f o r his father's authority. When Charles the Bold became Duke of B u r g u n dy in 1467, after rejecting a compromise, Adolph was thrown into p r i s o n . Arnold, against the will of the towns and the law of the land, p l e d g e d his duchy to Charles. Upon Arnold's death two years later, Charl e s t o o k p ossession of the duchy. 
1349 I45287  Van Housem  Jan Pieterszen Staats  Abt 1615  Aft 20 Aug 1675 

The Staats Family have never used the prefix "Van" before their name as their name was conferred upon them rather that being used by them in America to indicate where they came from in Europe. The first staats was one Joachim Guyse of Holland. He was a Rear Admiral and second in command of the Hollard Fleet at the time of rebellion against Spain 1567. At the gathering of the Grand Council of Holland he gave as his opinion that they should become Staats. Joachin Gye performed many courageous feats and saved Holland from ruin. The Grand Coucil conferred the name Staats upon him meaning states. He was made an Admiral over the fleet and granted the coat of arms still used in the Staats Family today. 
1350 I9037  Van Loon  Jan Albertse  Abt 1650  15 May 1720 

Jan Van Loon was born in Leige, then the Netherlands, now Belgium. He c a m e t o A m erica about 1675, arriving in New York (then New Amsterdam). O n N o v . 2 4 ,1675 the Minutes of the Common Council of New York City state t h a t h e t o ok the oath of allegiance to the King of Great Britain. on Jan 1 6 , 1 6 7 6 were entered his plans to Marry Marritje Alberts, and on Feb. 23 , 1 6 7 6 t hey were married in New York. 
1351 I8929  Van Loon  Nicholas Claas  14 Oct 1694  1748 

1856 Map showing Athens and Coxsackie, NY. Previous lands owned by Jan Albertse Van Loon Sr. then known as Loonenburgh, New Netherlands Colony. 
1352 I45389  Van Mulheym  Geertruyd  1639   
Reformed Dutch Church, 
1353 I1912  van Ness  Grietje Cornelis  Abt 1626  11 Sep 1689 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1354 I1912  van Ness  Grietje Cornelis  Abt 1626  11 Sep 1689 

According to the research papers of the Wykoff family (SL libr 1321008) she is the daughter of Cornelius van Ness and his first wife Maycke Hendricks van der Burchgraeff. Cornelius said to be the son of Hendrick Gerritse van Ness of the island of Ameland in the Netherlands. Maycke said to be the daughter of Hendrick Adriense van der Burchgraeff and of Annetje Jans of Laeckervelt in The Netherlands. Cornelis (her father) a native of Ameland but later living in Vianen near Utrecht which was the home of Killian van Rensselaer patron of the colony of Rensselaer in New Netherlands. 
1355 I45333  Van Noordtstrant  Hans Janszen  1610  30 Sep 1663 

He is said to have come from the same place at the same time as Jacob Janse and it is presumed they were brothers.

The Annals of Newton by James Riker, Jr. "The family of Norstrand, or Van Norstrand, on Long Island, derive origin from Hans Jansen, who came over in 1640 from Noortstrandt in Holstein, and whose sons adopted the name of the place whence their father emigrated, which time had reduced to the present orthography. Hans. m. in 1652 Janneken Gerrits van Loon, and d. at Flatlands in 1690

THE VAN VOORHEES FAMILY IN AMERICA, The First Six Generations, compiled and edited by Florence A. Cristoph, published by the Van Voorhees Association, 2000, on pages 4 and 5, entry 6, provides information for these entries. 
1356 I45492  Van Salee  Anthony Janszoon  1607   

Extensive and well-documented Wikitree profile:
Anthony Janszoon van Salee was a prominent early Dutch settler in the English settlement under Dutch rule in Gravesend, Brooklyn, Kings, western Long Island, after 1645. Gravesend is now a neighborhood in south-central Brooklyn, along the shore of Gravesend Bay and Coney Island. In 1609 Henry Hudson landed his ship the Half Moon there at the island known by the natives as Narrioch (Coney Island). In 1643 Gravesend then became one of the original towns founded in the Dutch colony of New Netherland when Governor Willem Kieft granted a land patent to the Anabaptist Lady Deborah Moody, as a site where that English sect could settle free from religious persecution. Clashes with the natives delayed the town for two more years, until December 19, 1645.

Anthony Janszoon van Salee (1607–1676) was the son of famed Dutch pirate Jan Janszoon van Haarlem. Anthony was an original settler of and prominent landholder, merchant, and creditor in New Netherland, and may have been the first Muslim in the New World. 
1357 I45495  Van Salee  Sarah Antonise  1635  1715 
New Utrecht Cemetery, 16th Avenue & 84th Street 
1358 I45391  Van Siclen  Antje  Abt 1680  1747 
Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church 
1359 I45391  Van Siclen  Antje  Abt 1680  1747 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church 
1360 I45391  Van Siclen  Antje  Abt 1680  1747 

Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1361 I6064  van Sudbury  Gilbert  1534  4 Feb 1592  Gilbert Gerard was the ancestor of the Gerards, Lords Gerard, of Bromley, the Earls of Macclesfield, and the Gerards, of Fiskerton.

Gilbert was a prominent lawyer, politician, and landowner of the Tudor period. He was returned six times as a member of the English parliament for four different constituencies. He was Attorney-General for more than twenty years during the reign of Elizabeth I, as well as vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and later served as Master of the Rolls. He acquired large estates, mainly in Lancashire and Staffordshire. 
1362 I45468  Van Voorhees  Coert Stevense  Abt 1638  Aft 20 Jun 1699 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1363 I45468  Van Voorhees  Coert Stevense  Abt 1638  Aft 20 Jun 1699 

He was active in church and civic affairs at Nieuw Amersfoort, represented Amersfoort at the Assembly in Nieuw Amsterdam in April, 1664 and at New Orange in 1674. He was appointed a magistrate in 1673 and was a deacon in the church in 1674. In 1687 he took the Oath of Allegiance to the British, was Captain of Militia in 1689. 
1364 I45352  Van Voorhees  Gerrit Coertszen  Abt 1665  Bef 23 Sep 1704 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1365 I45360  van Voorhees  Maritjie Garretje  23 Oct 1687   
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery
Old Newtown Cemetery

Event Description: Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1366 I45466  Van Voorhees  Steven Coerte  Abt 1599   
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1367 I45466  Van Voorhees  Steven Coerte  Abt 1599   

The Van Voorhees Family Association found at http://www.vanvoorhees.org/ has published three volumes of documented family history. The first volume is titled, “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The First Six Generations.” The next two volumes are titled “The Van Voorhees Family in America, The Seventh and Eighth Generations, Volume I and II. On line they have an index to the 9th generation. The Family History Library in Salt Lake City has a copy of the three volumes, and they can be purchased on Amazon.

Excerpt from 'The Van Voorhees Family, Vol 1', 1984
Captain Pieter Lucasz sailed his little ship "De Bonte Koe" (the Spotted Cow) between Holland and Nieuw Amsterdam regularly, but the arrival on April 15, 1660 is of special interest, as among the passengers were: "Steven Koorts From Drenthe, wife and seven children aged 22, 10, 8, 6,4, 2. Jan Kiers, farmer and wife from Drenthe" (Holland Society Yearbook, 1902, p. 13)

Steven Koerts was the ancestor of the Van Voorhees family in the New World, regardless of later variations in spelling. Even he sometimes signed his name Steven Koerten. Steven Coerten has often been used in genealogical writings; today he is by tradition referred to as Steven Coerte.

Aged sixty at the time of arrival in Nieuw Amsterdam, he was born near Hees in the Province of Drenthe in 1600.

Having arrived in Nieuw Amsterdam, Steven Koerts took time to look around and apparently had the means to do so and to maintain his family in the interim. It was not until November 29, 1660, seven months after his arrival, that he purchased from Cornelis Dircksen Hoogland nine morgens of corn land, seven morgens of wood land, ten morgens of plain land and five morgens of salt meadow in Flatlands, with the house and house plotin the village of Amersfoort en Bergen (Flatlands) with a brewery, brewing apparatus, kettle house and casks with appurtenances for three thousand guilders (Flatbush Records, Lib. B. p. 37). (A morgen is about two acres of land.)

Since he acquired all the equipment it is assumed that he followed the brewing business. That he entered into the religious and civic affairs ofhis community is without question. He was appointed a magistrate in 1664and on March 19, 1664 with Elbert Elbertse (Stoothoff), represented NieuwAmersfoort in the Provincial Assembly. (Brodhead's History of New York,p. 67). In October 1667 Steven Coertes with others, patented the town of Flatlands. 
1368 I45267  Van Wyck  Cornelius  21 Apr 1694  28 Jun 1761 
First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery
First Reformed Protestant Dutch Church Cemetery 
1369 I45267  Van Wyck  Cornelius  21 Apr 1694  28 Jun 1761 

Capt. Cornelius Van Wyck
Abt 1776, in Dutchess, New York was in the regiment of Minute Men - New York, Genealogical Records, 1675-1920 
1370 I45263  Van Wyck  Cornelius Barentsen  1645  23 Jun 1712 

Cornelis Barentsen van Wyck came to New Netherland circa 1660. He settled at Midwout, Kings Co., Long Island. Appears on the tax list as early as 1664, and was allotted meadows in Canarsie in 1668. Took the Oath of Allegiance on 26 Sep 1687 stating he had been in this country for 27 years.

He was Deacon at Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, Flatbush, Kings Co., Long Island, New York, from 1675 to 1677.
He and Anna Polhemus were members of the at Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, Flatbush, Kings Co., Long Island, New York, in 1677 at Midwood. 
1371 I45260  Van Wyck  Jacob  Abt 1620  1675 
Old Dutch Churchyard 
1372 I45265  Van Wyck  Theodorus  17 Sep 1668  4 Dec 1753 

A Red Alert has been placed on this family which has been researched by a Certified Professional Researcher. Please be so kind to not make any changes until you have followed the Red Alert instructions. Thank you kindly
See research on the ancestry of Susanna Van Wyck (LZG6-X77), 24 September 2019, 19 pages, included in her Memories, by an Accredited Professional Researcher .

!Source: Birth date and place, death dat
!Source: Birth date and place, death date and place, marriage date and temple ordindance dates, from Robert H. Ross, P.O. Box 726, Meadville, Pa. 16335, April 95.

Flatbush. Removed 1701 to Great Neck.
Flatbush. Removed 1701 to Great Neck. Justice of the Peace. 
1373 I45335  Vanderbeek  Femmetje Remsen  Abt 1658   

Information for these entries are found on page 27, entry 36, in THE VAN VOORHEES FAMILY IN AMERICA, The First Six Generations, compiled and edited by Florence A. Christoph, published by The Van Voorhees Association, 2000, and on page 95, entry 92, of THE VAN VOORHEES FAMILY, Volume 1, The First Four Generations, published by the Van Voorhees Association, 1984. 
1374 I45331  Vanderbeek  Remmelt Jansen  18 Aug 1619  29 May 1681 
Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1375 I45331  Vanderbeek  Remmelt Jansen  18 Aug 1619  29 May 1681 

Rem Jansen was probably born before 1620.

He married Jannetje Jorise Rapalje, daughter of Joris Janszen Rapalje and Catalyna Trico, at Reformed Dutch Church, New Amsterdam, on 21 December 1642 "Remmet Janszen, j.m. Van Jeveren, en Janneken Rapalje, j.d. Van N. Nederlt"
Samuel S. Purple, Records of the Reformed Dutch Church in New Amsterdam and New York; Marriages from 11 December 1639 to 26 August 1801 (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, reprint 2003, original 1890 NYG&BS), p.12.

Remmerlt Jansz, from Jewerden (Jeveren, or Jever, in Oldenburg), smith, was at New Amsterdam as early as 1638, and in 1643 owned land on Long Island. Early in May 1650, he obtained from the authorities of Rensselaerwijck a lease of a garden adjoining the churchyard, and is referred to as being an Inwoonder in Fort Orangien (inhabitant of Fort Orange).
A.J.F. van Laer, Settlers of Rensselaerswyck 1630-1658 (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1965, 1980), page 41.
Rem Jansen and Jannetje Jorise Rapalje were members of the at Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, Flatbush, Kings Co., Long Island, New York, on 19 November 1679 "in the Wallabout."
Ibid., page 333 Register of the Members from the Four Villages. 19 Nov 1679. In the Wallabout. Rem Jansz (Died Feb 1681) and wife Jannetje Joris Rapailie (note says, "left for N. York with certificate). 
1376 I45542  Vanderveer  Adrian  21 Dec 1796  5 Jul 1857 
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S93@
PAGE "New York, Kings County Estate Files, 1866-1923", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF : Sat Mar 09 11:46:12 UTC 2024), Entry for Maria Vanderveer, 1869.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:N7LF-PYF
SOUR: SOUR @S37@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV 
1377 I45888  Vanderveer  Catherine  7 Jul 1832  5 Jun 1922  Green-Wood Cemetery 
1378 I45533  Vanderveer  Cornelis Janszen Dominicus  Abt 1650  22 Feb 1703 

In 1683, Cornelis Van der Veer is listed on the Assessment Roll of Midwout as owner of one hundred acres of land and in the Flatbush Census of 1698 his household consisted of one man, one woman, and four children; two other children had already married and started households of their own. Cornelis died before Feb 22, 1703, when his wife paid for a grave in the church at Flatbush for her husband. She was Tryntje Mandeville, daughter of Gillis Jansz Mandeville, who mentions her in his will dated Sept. 15, 1696, and his wife Elizabeth Hendricks. For a brief history of the Mandeville family, see article in the The Record v.69, pp.222-24 
1379 I45537  Vanderveer  Cornelius Aertse  Abt 1700  22 Jan 1782 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery

Event Description: Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1380 I45544  Vanderveer  Henry Vernon  29 Sep 1829  2 Apr 1885 
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMG
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMG 
1381 I45530  Vanderveer  Jan Cornelius  Abt 1580  7 Dec 1647 

Genealogies of Long Island; Vol. II; Early Generations of the Vanderveer Family; Leser Dunbar Mapes; pp. 625-642.

The first to adopt the surname Dominicus 
1382 I45875  Vanderveer  John A  1825  2 Dec 1896  Green-Wood Cemetery 
1383 I45875  Vanderveer  John A  1825  2 Dec 1896 
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S36@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1880", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK : Mon Jan 20 15:34:46 UTC 2025), Entry for John A. Vanderveer and Harriet E. Vanderveer, 1880.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZD4-7QK
SOUR: SOUR @S35@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1870", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N : Tue Jan 21 12:24:27 UTC 2025), Entry for John Vanderveer and Harriett Vanderveer, 1870.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M8JS-C7N
SOUR: SOUR @S37@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YML
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YML
SOUR: SOUR @S98@
PAGE "New York, County Marriages, 1778-1848; 1908-1937", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HP : Sun Mar 10 20:33:12 UTC 2024), Entry for Newman D Waffle and David A Waffle, 31 December 1915.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HY
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FFRX-1HY 
1384 I45541  Vanderveer  John C  22 Aug 1762  7 Apr 1845  Dutch Reformed Cemetery 
1385 I45889  Vanderveer  Mary  Abt 1820  4 May 1892 
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S37@
PAGE "United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YMV : Tue Jan 14 16:29:52 UTC 2025), Entry for Adrian Vanderveer and Eliza Vanderveer, 1850.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YM2
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MCY5-YM2 
1386 I45320  Vandervoort  Elsje  23 Aug 1720  2 Oct 1784 
Johannes Schenk of Bushwick Long Island and his Descendants - a Geneology
THE VANDERFORDS: Early Settlers of America - by. Cheryl Jensen: 
1387 I45298  Vandervoort  Michael Paulus  18 Nov 1615  20 Sep 1692 

Wikipedia article on M.P. Van der Voort
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Pauluzen_Van_der_Voort?wprov=sfla1
In New York (it was not New York it was New Amsterdam), Michael went by his Dutch name, Michiel Pauluszen, which means "Michael son of Paul". He added Vandervoort to his name about 1650.

In "The Vanderfords-Early Settlers of America" by Cheryl Lynds Jensen (1992) we read: Exactly when Michael Paul Vanderford came to New York is undocumented, but it was no doubt some years prior to 1640, when he and Maria Rapalje were married. Considering the shortage of single women, George Rapalje would have had plenty of offers for the hand of his young daughter, Maria, and would have selected someone established and a "Good match". It is probable that Michael had been employed by the Dutch West India Company in some trade capacity, leaving the Company prior to marrying Maria. This is difficult to verify, however, as all of the early documents and archives relating to the Dutch occupation of New Netherland were sold at auction as scrap sometime around 1820, and were never seen again.

Soon after Michael and Maria were married, Michael contracted to purchase land close to George Rapalje but did not complete the transaction, due to the Indian uprisings...

The fort was not large enough to shelter all the inhabitants or protect their houses, so in 1653 it was decided to construct a palisade, or wall, along the upper limit of the town of New Amsterdam. On April 20th, it was resolved that "the citizens without exception should begin immediately digging a ditch from the East river to the North (Hudson) river, 4 to 5 feet deep and 11 to 12 feet wide at the top sloping in a little towards the bottom" and that carpenters should "be urged to prepare jointly the stakes and rails...The palisades, completed early in July, protected the southern tip of Manhattan Island, running from the Hudson to the East River. It was a line of solid planks, tapered at the top and set close together, held together by cross timbers, with anearthen ramp behind. The road next to this wall became Wall Street, the financial center of New York.

Michael used his sloop to deliver 14 loads of lumber to be used in the construction of the palisades. In September, his wife, Maria, had to go to court to demand payment from the City. Michael was awarded 10 guilders for each load....On January 21, 1647 Michael was granted Lot 2 of Block N Castello Plan, on which was built a large stone brewery. He later obtained part of Lot 7, and built the house in which his family lived, now 49 Stone Street. George Rapalje's family lived on Lot 5 of Block G, right next to the wall of the fort....

Later, Peter Stuyvestant took steps to organize the town. He hired surveyors to define the property lines and required that anyone intending to build submit plans for approval by the surveyors...

In 1657 Stuyvestant raised considerable monies to rebuild the city's defenses by introducing the title of "burgher." Michael became one of the 204 small burghers, at a cost of 25 florins. There were also 20 "great burghers," who held positions in the government, Company or military, and paid 50 florins. Being a burgher gave you the right to engage in trade and hold office....

At this time Maryland offered land for settlement, and Michael decided to move. In 1658 and 1659 he sold most of his holdings in New Amsterdam and in 1660 his entire family sailed for the eastern shore of Maryland. Four years later Peter Stuyvestant surrendered New Amsterdam to the British. 
1388 I45303  Vandervoort  Paulus  Bef 8 Jul 1681  1752  Stafford Cemetery

Stafford Cemetery 
1389 I45301  Vandervoort  Paulus Michaelse  Abt 1645  2 Jun 1681 
NYGB Vol 108, Number 4, October 1977 verifies his name as Paulus after his paternal grandfather Paulus Micheal Van der Voort. He spent his early life in New Amsterdam and Wallabout section of Brooklyn. The assumption is he went to Maryland wit h his father around 1600 then later moved back to Bedford section of Brooklyn about 1676. He died shortly before the baptism of his youngest son as evidenced by the baptismal records. Since he died before his father one would expect his family to have been taken care of in Michael's will but very likely his father felt that they were provided for having his Brooklyn property. 
1390 I43  Vanloan  Caspar Ansel  19 Aug 1827  16 Sep 1915  Caspar Ansel VanLoan was one of the original 49rs, and is listed as a passenger on the Nautilus from New York, Feb. 22nd, 1849. He panned for gold on the Yuba River.

LDS: Source Information: Batch Number: 7135130 Sheet: 98 Source Call No: 0820046 
1391 I7182  Vannes  Ridoredh  Abt 810  Abt 850 

In an 11th century genealogy that includes rulers of Brittany, Ridoredh i s l i s t e d as the father of Alain I 'the Great' (''Alanus major'') and ( '' P a s c urthen'') and specifies that Alain is illegitimate and Pascwethen , a l e g i t imate son. 
1392 I1903  Vanness  Cornelius Hendrick  1600  Aft 12 Nov 1684 

Source
THE FOLLOWING IS PART OF A BRIEF SKETCH FOUND IN "PRE-REVOLUTIONARYDUTCH HOUSES AND FAMILIES IN NORTHERN NEW JERSEY AND SOUTHERN NEW YORK" BYROSALIE FELLOWS BAILEY, DOVER PUBLICATIONS, NEW YORK; 1968: !"CORNELIS HENDRICSE VAN NESS EMIGRATED TO BEVERWYCK IN 1642 ANDSETTLED AT GREENBUSH. HE MARRIED MAYKEN HENDRICKS BURCHGRAEFF, AND SECONDLY IN1664 MARITIE DAMEN, AS HER THIRD HUSBAND. AFTER HIS SECOND MARRIAGE, THEYLIVED IN ALBANY AND LATER IN SCHENECTADY. THEY BOTH DIED SHORTLY BEFORE1682." !NAME OF WIFE IS VAN DEN BURCHGRAEFF. !NYG&BS RECORD, VOL. 72, PG. 148, 150-153, 155. GENEALOGIES OF FIRST FAMILIES OF ALBANY, 1872, JONATHAN PEARSON, PG.128. VAN NESS MSS AT NY GEN. & BIOG. SOCIETY LIB, 1223 58 ST, NYC HUDSON-MOHAWK GEN. & FAMILY MEMOIRS, CUYLER REYNOLDS, VOL II, PG 1376ON VAN NESS FAMILY. VAN RENSSELAER BOUWIER MSS, TRANSLATED 7 ED. BYA.J.F. VAN LAER, 1908, PG 824-825. !#8 HENDRICK MD (2) 25 NOV 1688 VAN DAM, CATARINA #10 GERRIT MD (2) 14 FEB 1676-7 LOOCKERMANS, MARIETJE

!Compendium of American Genealogy V 6 .
!Compendium of American Genealogy V 6 . 1937, by Frederick Adams Virkus p 53 Immigrant from Holland in 1641. Indian commander at Ft Orange 1665-6 Captain. Occupation-brewer From Compedium - 691 from Nes on Island of Ameland , province of Friesland, North Holland lived with wife Maijgen, in Vianen, South Holland in 1625 and owned property at Sscheperswyck, near Leksmond, Vianen, Holland until 1661 Immigrated Aug 164I on the Ship Eyckenboom. Had a farm at Bethlehem from 1642-48 farm at Greenbush from 1650-58 A wealthy brewer of Ft Orange Magistrate in Rennelaerswyck Document of 1664 turning over property from Cornelis Van Nes to his children gives their names

Cornelis Hendrickse VAN NESS Birth: 1
Cornelis Hendrickse VAN NESS Birth: 1602 in Vianen, South Holland, Netherlands, On The Haverdijk Death: 1681 in Greenbush, Albany, NY/Fairfield, Essex, New York Sex: M Father: Hendrick Gerritse VAN NESS Mother: Anneke Gerritje WESSELS Occupation: Brewer, acting Indian Commissioner Changed: 17 Dec 2001 Mayken Hendrickse VAN DEN BURCHGRAEFF (Wife) Marriage: 31 JUL 1625 in Viaven, Havendijke, Zeeland, Netherlands Children: Gerritje Cornelis VAN NESS Hendrickje Cornelisse VAN NESS Hendrick Cornelis VAN NESS Gerrit Cornelis VAN NESS Jan Cornelis VAN NESS Maritie Van Eps DAMEN (Wife) Marriage: 21 MAR 1664 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Notes Individual: Full Context of Albany, New York Church Records, 1683-1700 1699-1700 Pieter, of Pieter Van Slyck and Johanna Hanssen. Wit.: Cornelis Van Nes, Marritje Van Nes. Event: Emigrated 1642 On the "Oaktree" from Vianen, Holland, to Fort Orange Cornelis was the third of Maria's three husbands. He was a brewer. Emigrated in 1642 to Fort Orange. He settled first on a farm at Bethlehem, then in 1650 on a farm near Greenbush. Cornelis was a member of the City Council of Fort Orange from 1652 to 1658, and in 1660, 1661, and 1663. He served as magistrate at Fort Orange in 1665 and 1666. He was the acting Indian Commissioner under the Dutch. He was also captain of the night watch at Rensselaerswyck in 1663. Non-standard gedcom data: 1 HONO 2 NOTE City Council of Fort Orange from 1652 to 1658, and in 1660, 2 NOTE 1661, and 1663

Person note sources
Genealogical Notes of NY and New England Families, Talcott, p 44, 343-4;
lived upon the Hazendyck, South Holland;
1625 land at Scherperswyck, near Leksmond, South Holland, Holland;
Ship Passenger Lists(NY- NJ) 1600-1825, Boyer, p 32, 60;
Sailed from Amsterdam 17 May 1641; Arrived at New Amsterdam, NY, Aug 1641; 1642-8
charged tithes, farm at Bethlehem, NY; 1649 Court action, New Amsterdam, NY; 22 Aug 1650
Greenbush, NY land bought;
Court Minutes of Rensselaerswyck, NY 1648-52, 14 sep 1648, Cornelis van Es/Nes & son
inlaw Pieter Claesz; p 53, insists that the director wronged his son inlaw, Pieter Claesz;
Court Minutes of Albany, Rensselaerswyck, and Schenectady, NY, vol. 1;
Family search, IGI 1992;
24 Mar 1664 he was magistrate of Rensselaerswyck, NY still a widower, with his children
applied for a division of their mothers estate;
Will 1681, Greenbush, Albany (now Rensselaerswyck), NY;
(Family search Ancestral File has death place as Fairfield, Essex, NY ?);
Mar: 1st Mayken Hendrickse Van Den Burchgraeff, 31 Jul 1625, Vianen, South Holland, Holland;
Mar. 2nd Maritje Damen, a widow of Dirk Van Eps, 2) Hendrick Andriese Van Doesburgh, abt
1664; deceased by 1681 will;

Sources of Information: J Pearsons Gen.
Sources of Information: J Pearsons Gen. lst Settlers of ASlbany p l129; Gen Notes of N.Y. & N.E Fam. p 343 Cornelis was also sealed to his parents 11 May 1990 AZ.

!Aulls - Bryan & Allied Families:Leslia
!Aulls - Bryan & Allied Families:Leslia Bryan, pg 118

NOTES! Third husband of Maria Damen md 2
NOTES! Third husband of Maria Damen md 21 Mar 1664 Hon Cornelius Van Nes/Van Ness (or Van ES) of Amersfort, d 1684 emigrated 1641 to Renesselaerwyck, and Albany. Widower of Mayken Hnedricks(e) Burchgraeff (van den Burchgraeff) who d bet 1658-1664, she was the d/o Hendrick Asriaensz(van den Burchgraef) and Annetje Jans (his second wife). Van Ness came to Albany (Rensselaerswyck) NY in 1641 probably on the "den Eyckenboon". He had lived at Vianen on the Haverdijk, South Holland, 1625. He was a principle farmer at Rensselaweswyck, and battled with van Slichtenhorst. He was a brewer, had a house, lot and brewery, Greenbush, 1650. Councilor of Rensselaeswyck 1652-1658 1660 - 1663. Granted 50 morgens of land at Amerfoort ( Flatlands) 23 May 1659. 16 Jun 1664 granted 21 morgens of land at Schenectady, where he lived with Marritje in 1677. "Antenuptial Contract of Cornelis Van Nes and Maria Damen" found in Notarial Papers 1 and 2, 1660-1696 vol 3 of Early Records of the City and County of Albany and Coloney of Rensselaerswyck NY. This contract is dated 1664 and appears right after the contract where Marritie settles the inheritance rights of Jannetie, her dau by Hendrick Andriesz van Doesburg. In part the antenuptial contract states: "....The Honorable Cornelis van Nes, councillor of the Coloney of Rensselaerwyck, widower of the late Mayken van den Burchgraeff d/o Hendrick van de Burchgraeff, future bridegroom - and the virtuous Maria Damen widow of the Late Hendrick Andriesz Van Doseburgh dwelling in Beverwyck, future bride..... Marritie Damen m1 in Amesterdam Netherlands 1636 Dirck Evertsz van Eps ( thanks to Kees for his wonderful find and the source doucmentation) Lorine Mcginnis Schultz. m2 1649 in Amsterdam Netherlands Hendrick Andriesz van Doesburgh (Again thanks to Kees for sending to the list and providing a URL where we could view the actual documents) m3 1664 in the Albany NY area Cornelis Van Nes (antenuptial contract as cited above) She had only three living children, as evidenced by the agreement made between her heirs concerning the division of her property after her death. The document is dated 5 Aug 1686 and names the 3 children. Jan Van Eps; Lysbeth ( Elizabeth) Van Eps and Jannettie Hendrickse Van Doesburgh.

Married 1st 31 July 1625 at Havendijke,
Married 1st 31 July 1625 at Havendijke, Neth. Mayken Hendrickse BURCHGRAEFF. Married 2nd 21 Mar 1664 Maritie DAMEN. J. Pearson gen. First Settlers of Albany p.129. Gen Notes of N.Y. & N.E. Families p.343.

"The Island at the Center of the World"
One of van Nes's companions on the Oak Tree was a major figure in the colony's early history, Adriaen van der Donck. Van der Donck is the leading historical character in Shorto's lively 2004 book about New Netherlands. Here's the New York Times review.

THE ISLAND AT THE CENTER OF THE WORLD: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America, by Russell Shorto (384 pp. New York: Doubleday, 2004).

''And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors' eyes -- a fresh, green breast of the new world,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote on the greatest last page in American letters. On the grounds of Jay Gatsby's abandoned Long Island estate, Nick Carraway broods over the ''transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent . . . face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder'' before he lets himself be borne back to the Midwest, along ''the dark fields of the republic.''

And yet, Henry Hudson's entrance into New York Harbor has never gained full iconic status in the American experience. When it comes to the old Dutch colony of New Netherland and its capital, New Amsterdam, which took root on Manhattan Island in 1624, we tend to accept at face value Washington Irving's comic Knickerbocker caricatures, depicting a bunch of fat, bumptious graspers -- a colony full of overgrown hobbits. Surely such a people could not have contributed anything to the national character remotely approaching the influence of, say, those dour Puritans up in Massachusetts.

Russell Shorto, in his masterly new history, ''The Island at the Center of the World,'' begs to differ. The author of ''Gospel Truth,'' about the search for the historical Jesus, among other books, Shorto has taken up nearly as intrepid a pursuit here. ''If what made America great was its ingenious openness to different cultures,'' he writes, ''the small triangle of land at the southern tip of Manhattan Island is the birthplace of that idea: This island city would become the first multiethnic, upwardly mobile society on America's shores, a prototype of the kind of society that would be duplicated throughout the country and around the world.''

New Netherland was supposed to be just one more in a series of trading posts that the audacious new Dutch republic was germinating around the world, a private fief of the Dutch West India Company designed to pump more wealth into the extraordinary cultural and economic boom then transforming the mother country. But somehow, as Shorto puts it: ''New Netherland refused to remain a trading post. It was unique among the way stations of the Dutch empire in that it insisted on becoming a place'' -- and one that seemed almost magnetically drawn to the center of world events. From its very inception, New Amsterdam was a remarkably restless, ambitious, polyglot little seaport. ''It was Manhattan, in other words,'' he says, ''right from the start.''

Continue reading the main story
What Shorto has hit upon is nothing less than the true dichotomy at the heart of the American story, the fact that most of our ancestors came to this land for material as well as idealistic reasons (to properly recognize the experience of African-Americans, people brought here against their will, one must actually make it a triptych, but that is another story). Both motivations were complex. While Shorto concedes the innate ''messiness'' of colonial Manhattan, a place where at one point a quarter of all buildings were devoted to the production or consumption of alcohol, religious dissenters flocked to the Dutch colony to escape persecution up on Massachusetts Bay. Meanwhile, the Puritans' ''shining 'city on a hill' became Manifest Destiny, and morphs easily into a cheap battle cry.''

A new foundation myth requires a new progenitor. The Dutch republic was nearing the end of an 80-year war for national independence and religious freedom, and while tolerance at the time meant something closer to ''putting up with'' than ''celebrating'' diversity, as Shorto observes, the Dutch had developed a very modern appreciation of free thought, epitomized by the fact that this remarkable little country published an estimated one-half of all the world's books over the course of the 17th century.

Yet it is one thing to describe the cultural golden age of the nation that produced New Amsterdam and another to prove its influence upon the realized American nation. Shorto centers his story on the battle between two critical players in Dutch Manhattan, Peter Stuyvesant and Adriaen van der Donck. Stuyvesant, the wily, flinty soldier who had lost a leg fighting for the company on St. Martin, was mainly concerned with thwarting both the encroachments of the expansionary New England colonies and the demands for self-government from his subjects within. Van der Donck is a less well known but even more intriguing figure; a lawyer with the soul of a poet, punctilious enough to attach eight footnotes to a single sentence, but also a man capable of living for months among the Indians, and who kept breaking into rapturous descriptions of the New World in his neglected classic, ''A Description of New Netherland.'' Van der Donck's quest to remake New Netherland in the republican image of the mother country set him inevitably in opposition to Stuyvesant.

Ultimately, both men's aims would be frustrated, but their conflict forced the West India Company to grant the colony a charter, under which most citizens of New Amsterdam came to enjoy exceptional rights and freedoms, living as real stakeholders in an opportunity society. These liberties would survive the English takeover of the colony in 1664, and Shorto convincingly traces a direct line from their achievement straight to the New York State Legislature's decision in 1787 not to ratify the Constitution unless ''a bill of specific individual rights were attached to it.''

Why has the Dutch side of our national story remained so obscure for so long? In part because the historical records of New Netherland have literally been buried by the winners in one moldy archive after another, and not the least entertaining part of Shorto's book is his narrative of how these records managed to survive over 300 years of flood, fire and indifference. He generously credits the research other scholars have done to bring these invaluable materials back to the surface, as they translated some 12,000 sheets of rag paper from the 17th-century Dutch.

Taking full advantage of these newly recovered sources, Shorto makes frequent, deft excursions from New York to the Netherlands and England, Brazil and Curaçao; and the slave coast of Guinea to the Spice Islands and the German battlefields of the Thirty Years' War; and to Hartford and Boston and that hotly contested colonial prize, New Jersey. He portrays a formidable cast of historical actors -- the cunning, murderous fanatic who was Cromwell; the Stuarts, with all their dogs and horses and mistresses. Poor Henry Hudson, so caught up in his quest for the Northwest Passage that he was still asking, ''What do you mean by this?'' when his starving, freezing sailors finally set him and his young son adrift to die in a small boat, in the bay that would come to bear his name.

New York history buffs will be captivated by Shorto's descriptions of Manhattan in its primordial state, of bays full of salmon and oysters, and blue plums and fields of wild strawberries in what is now Midtown. Here the reader may learn, among many other historical tidbits, what the Dutch really paid for Manhattan (it wasn't $24), or the key role that Flushing played in securing freedom of conscience, or why the Knicks wear blue-and-orange uniforms, or how Yonkers, the Hutchinson River and Saw Mill River Parkways, Greenwich Village and Staten Island got their names. Yet Shorto never overwhelms one with trivia, and he writes at all times with passion, verve, nuance and considerable humor.

If there is a flaw in ''The Island at the Center of the World,'' it may be Shorto's underplaying of how the patroon system -- a semifeudal arrangement the West India Company allowed to be grafted onto its holdings -- undermined democracy in upstate New York even well into the 19th century. Yet over all, Shorto's basic premise is undeniable. The legacy of tolerance from the Dutch colony in Manhattan would be extended, as he writes, ''into the very heart of the continent, crossroads settlements transformed into cities, lights winking on in the dusk of the endless landscape, each with its cluster of founding ethnic groups: Toledo, Cleveland, Detroit, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Chicago, Green Bay'' -- deep into the dark fields of the Republic, indeed.

https://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/04/books/they-took-manhattan.html

1. First Settlers of Albany by J. Pearso
1. First Settlers of Albany by J. Pearsons, p. 129. 2. Gen. Notes of N.Y. & N.E. Families by Talcott, pp. 102,343.

"Genealogical Notes of New York and New
"Genealogical Notes of New York and New England," GS#974.7,D2t

IGI says he was born in Zeeland and ance
IGI says he was born in Zeeland and ancestral file says he was born in Holland. I found information he died at Albany, New York but the ancestral file says he died at Fairfield, Essex, New York. In 1641 Cornelis Van Nes came to Rennselaerwyck as a plantation manager and later seraved as a magistrate on the dutach court. Later his son Hendrick would serve on that court. Sources: Wycoff Bulletin June 1985 NYGB Vol 72 Roses Revisited Book 1987 Pioneer Settlers for New York Book xv 1934 Amer Gen Comp Book Vol 1-7 paper-Pre Rev. dutch houses by R.F. Bailey 1936 ancestral file 1993/1994 IGI

!1. # 2 page 545 Pippenger Family His.
!1. # 2 page 545 Pippenger Family His.

SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America"
SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America" publ by The Wyckoff Family in America; Summit, N.J.; 2nd Edition; 1950; Pg 4, 10, 11 / Calendar of Wills; 1626-1836; Albany, NY; comp by Berthold Fernow, 1896 Cornelis van Ness, member of Council of Rensselaerswyck Colony secures to ch of 1st wife, Mayeke Hendricx van den Burchgraeff / The Ancestors & Descendants of Simon Van Ness & Hester Delamater, by David M. Riker, 442 Woodcrest Dr, Mechanicsburg, PA [ca 1981-84] FHL Film #1697542 / Fam Group Sheet submitted by Margaret Pack Bowden, Box 209, West Yellowstone, Montana [Pre-1959?]SOURCE: "The Wyckoff Family in America" publ by The Wyckoff Family in America; Summit, N.J.; 2nd Edition; 1950; Pg 4, 10, 11 / Calendar of Wills; 1626-1836; Albany, NY; comp by Berthold Fernow, 1896 Cornelis van Ness, member of Council of Rensselaerswyck Colony secures to ch of 1st wife, Mayeke Hendricx van den Burchgraeff / The Ancestors & Descendants of Simon Van Ness & Hester Delamater, by David M. Riker, 442 Woodcrest Dr, Mechanicsburg, PA [ca 1981-84] FHL Film #1697542 / Fam Group Sheet submitted by Margaret Pack Bowden, Box 209, West Yellowstone, Montana [Pre-1959?]

Came from Holland to New Amsterdam in 16
Came from Holland to New Amsterdam in 1641. Settled where Albany , New York is.

native of village of Nes
native of village of Nes on the Island of Ameland in province of Friesland, North Holland. Later lived near Utrecht in South Holland, home of Killian van Rensselaer; thus he emigrated with his wife to the colony of Rensselaerswick on upper Hudson River, New York, in 1641. 
1393 I45885  VanSiclen  Ferdinand  15 Nov 1812  Bef 16 Sep 1934 
dead dead 
1394 I1196  Veľký  Štefan  975  21 Aug 1038 
Stephen I, also known as King Saint Stephen (Štefan I. or Štefan Veľký; c. 975 – 15 August 1038), was the last grand prince of the Hungarians between 997 and 1000 or 1001, and the first king of Hungary from 1000 or 1001 until his death in 1038. The year of his birth is uncertain, but many details of his life suggest that he was born in, or after, 975, in Esztergom. He was given the pagan name Vajk at birth, but the date of his baptism is unknown. He was the only son of Grand Prince Géza and his wife, Sarolt, who was descended from a prominent family of gyulas. Although both of his parents were baptized, Stephen was the first member of his family to become a devout Christian. He married Gisela of Bavaria, a scion of the imperial Ottonian dynasty. 
1395 I28388  Vencill  Gem Flora  15 Jun 1894  16 Jul 1965  Exeter District Cemetery 
1396 I28388  Vencill  Gem Flora  15 Jun 1894  16 Jul 1965 
Need to search 1920 census to find her r Need to search 1920 census to find her real name. Also found as Jem V. 
1397 I7876  Verch Gruffydd  Nesta  7 Apr 1059  1153 

She was Nest, daughter of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn (d. 1063), the first (an d o n l y ) n ative king of all of Wales. Gruffudd did have a daughter named N e s t , w i fe of Osbern FitzRichard , but there is no evidence that she was a l s o m a r ried to Trahaern ap Caradog, and no early source for a second da u g h t e r named Nest.
Sources: Title: " Welsh Genealogies AD 300-1400 & AD 1400-1500"
[[Category:Rhuddlan cwmwd, Tegeingl]]
[[Category: Legendary Scottish Stewart Ancestry]]
}

==Biography==
This is the biography of Nest [II] the second Nest, daughter of Gruffyd d a p L l e w elyn and his second wife Ealdgyth of Mercia

===Disambiguation===
This is not the Nest I who married Trahaearn ap Caradog. "....Gruffudd a l s o h a d a d aughter, Nest, who married Trahaearn ap Caradog. This man, i n 1 0 7 5 , s ucceeded Bleddyn ap Cynfyn as king of Powys, and probably also k i n g o f G w ynedd. Born c. 1035, Trahaearn had sons Owain and Llywarch (a m o n g o t hers) who were born c. 1065/1070. These dates point to c. 1050 a s t h e b i r thdate of Nest, with the marriage taking place shortly after G ru f f u d d's death in 1063.

===Birth===
Nest II ferch Gruffudd was born about 1056 (Wolcott) D arrell Wolcott, Ancient Wales Studies. [http://www.ancientwales s t u d i es.org/id210.html The Consorts and Children of Gruffudd ap Llewely n ] A c c e ssed July 8, 2015 or in Rhuddlan 1059 (Boyer). Carl Boyer 3rd. Medieval Welsh Ancestors of Certain Amer i c a n s . By the author: Santa Clarita, California, 2004. Gruffudd ap L l y w e l yn is #18 on page 287.
Wolcott's dating of the birth of the second Nest places her as a daught e r o f G r u ffudd and Ealdgyth.

===Parents===
Nesta, according to Cawley, daughter of Gruffydd and his second wife. < r e f n a m e="fmg399"> Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealgy. M e d i e v al Lands Database. Wales [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/WALES.h t m # _ f tnref399 Gruffydd ap Llywelyn ap Seisyll] Accessed October 23, 20 1 8 [ [ D a y-1904|jhd]]

Orderic Vitalis names "Nest" as the daughter of "Edwinus.et Morcarus co m i t e s , filii Algari.Edgivam sororem eorum" and her first husband "Gritf r i d i . regis Guallorum"[422]. The primary source which confirms her marr i a g e h a s not yet been identified.

===1070 Marriage===
She married OSBERN FitzRichard of Richard's Castle, son of RICHARD Fitz S c r o b & h is wife --- (-after [1087/88]).
Nest [II] married about 1070 (possibly) Osbern fitz Richard. Wolcott n o t e s t h at the husband of "this c. 1056 Nest is widely cited by modern a u t h o r s as the Norman man, Osbern fitz Richard. There are, however, no a n c i e n t or even medieval manuscripts which confirm that marriage."
Keats-Rohan, however, in Domesday Descendants shows "Nesta filia Grufyd d , " t h e d aughter of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn of Deheubarth (d. 1063) as the w i f e o f O s bern fitz Richard Scrop of Richard's Castle. K. S. B. K e a t s - Rohan, Domesday Descendants, Boydell Press: 2002; p. 846, citing D a r l i n gton, Cartulary of Worcester (Register I) (1962-1963), no. 148
The husband of this c. 1056 Nest is widely cited by modern authors as t h e N o r m an man, Osbern fitz Richard. There are, however, no ancient or e v e n m e d ieval manuscripts which confirm that marriage. The identificati o n i s m a d e by inference alone.

===Binley===
The 1086 Domesday Book for Warwickshire notes that Binley (located just e a s t o f C o ventry) was held by the Cathedral Priory, and that 3 hides of t h a t l a n d had been acquired from Osbern. And before the Conquest, those 3 h i d e s w e re held by Ealdgyth wife of Gruffudd. One assumes, but cannot b e c e r t a in, that Osbern had owned the land "et uxor" as the husband of t he h e i r e ss daughter of Ealdgyth. This assumption is strengthened a bi t b y a c . 1 1 0 0/20 entry in the Cartulary of Worchester Cathedral Priory w h ere in H u g h fitz Osbern confirms a grant made by his father "for the so u l s o f h i s father Osbern and his mother Nest". Accordingly, the wife o f O s b e r n was named Nest ferch "unknown".
By assuming such a marrriage, the other sources we mentioned above seem t o d o v e t ail. Ealdgyth (the daughter of Earl Aelfgar) owned some land in B i n l e y , Warwickshire. She married Gruffudd ap Llewelyn and had a daught e r n a m e d Nest, her only child by him.
After the death of Ealdgyth (sometime after 1066), this land descended t o h e r d a u ghter Nest.
Nest married Osbern c. 1070 and he, likely late in life, gave it to the C a t h e d ral Priory in Coventry. Of course, there are other ways in which O s b e r n m ight have acquired that land and other ladies named Nest he migh t h a v e m a rried. Thus, we label the marriage as quite possible but unpr ov e n .
Nest [II] would have been yet a child when her father was killed in 106 3 , a n d l i kely married at age 14 c. 1070
Richard le Scrob/Scrope, born about 1010, built Richard's Castle in Her e f o r d shire about 1048 as a baron of King Edward the Confessor. He was t h e f a t h er of Osbern who married Nest [II] born about 1056.
Osbern held Stanage in Herefordshire according to the 1086 Domesday Boo k . N e s t [ II], the wife of Osbern, was probably, but not certainly, a d a ug h t e r of Gruffudd ap Llewelyn.

===Issue===
#Hugo. "Hugo filius Osberti" donated a saltpan at Droitwich to the mon k s o f W o r cester Cathedral priory, for the souls of "patris mei Osberti e t m a t r i s mee Nest", by charter dated to [early 12th century][423]. They had a son, Hugh, who about 1110, confirmed to the m o n k s o f W orchester Priory, his father's grant of Boraston and the churc h a t D o d d erhill "for the souls of his father, Osbern, and his mother, N es t. " S h e i s not further identified. It was common for a son to confir m g r a n t s made by his father when the father died. # N e st. It is known that this second Nest was the mother of a daught e r , a l s o named Nest, who married the Norman knight Bernard Newmarch. Gerald's "Journey through Wales", Book 1, Chapt e r 2 . C i t ed by Darrell Wolcott, Ancient Wales Studies. [http://www.an c i ent w a lesstudies.org/id210.html The Consorts and Children of Gruffudd a p L l e w e lyn] Accessed Jan 6, 2018. [[Day-1904|jhd]] Nest (c1071 ) m c 1 0 8 5 t he Norman knight Bernard Newmarch N est, b . c . 1 0 5 6, m Osbern Fitz Richard of Richard's Castle, Herefordshi re. B o ye r s t ates is child of Gruffudd and Edith.

==Research Notes==

===Nest and the Scottish Stewart Legend===
In stories of the legendary Banquo and his son Fleance, as recounted in R a p h a e l Holinshead's Chronicles, Bevington, David . F o u r T r agedies. Bantam, 1988. ISBN 0-553-21283-4, p.714. Cited by W ik i p e d ia. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleance Fleance] Accessed Feb 6 , 2 0 1 8 . [ [Day-1904|jhd]] Fleance-in fear of Macbeth???flees to W a l e s a n d marries [[Gruffydd-5|Nesta verch Gruffydd]], daughter of [[ap L l e w e l yn-23|Gruffydd ap Llywelyn]], the last native Prince of Wales.
They have a son named Walter who makes his way back to Scotland and is a p p o i n ted Royal Steward. According to legend, he fathered the Stuart mon a r c h s o f England and Scotland. Shakespeare, Will i a m a n d N icholas Brooke. The Tragedy of Macbeth. Oxford Oxfordshire: Ox f o r d U n iversity Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-283417-7, p. 68. Cited by Wikip e d i a . [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fleance Fleance] Accessed Feb 6, 2 0 1 8 . [ [ Day-1904|jhd]]
Gruffydd has a daughter, Nest -- in fact, probably two of them! They a r e r e a l p eople, but the rest of this account has no basis in fact. Nei t h e r [ [ Lochaber-1|Banquo]] nor [[Lochaber-2|Fleance]] ever existed, and t h e W a l t er of this story was [[FitzAlan-573|Walter FitzAlan]], son of [[ F i t z F laald-16|Alan FitzFlaald]]. Alan began his life in Brittany but w a s a w a r ded lands by King Henry in Shropshire, adjacent to Wales. Walte r g r e w u p i n Shropshire and moved on to Scotland to serve the kings the re a s H i g h S teward of Scotland.

== Sources ==



See also:
}* Albert F. Schmuhl. The Royal Line. First published New York City M a r c h 1 9 29, Revised March 1980 
1398 I7309  Verch Rhys  Nesta  1073  Aft 1136 

Daughter o f Rhys Ap Tewdwr (King of Dyfed in South Wales) and Gwladys a p C y n f y n. Nesta (Princess of Deheubarth) was known as the most beautif ul w o m a n i n Wales. She had many lovers., She started the FitzHenry line ( t h r o u gh Henry I) and the FitzStephens line (through Owain ap Cadwgan).

In 1090 Nesta was sent to the court of Henry I as a hostage for the goo d c o n d u ct of her people. Henry I, attracted by her good looks, she had a m a l e c h i ld Henry
filius regis' from him, and thus started the FitzHenry line. After year s o f p e a c e she was returned to Geraldus and her people.
Nest returned home to find the kingdom of Dyfed under Norman tutelage . T h e N o r m an's were colonizing the former kingdom of Dyfed and establishin g a c o l o n y of Flemish soldiers intermixed with English settlers in what i s n o w P e m broke.
On Christmas 1108 Owain ap Cadwgan of Cardigan a cousin, came to visit G e r a l d a nd Nesta. He so lusted after her that he, that night, attacked t h e c a s t le. According to the Brut y Tywysogion, Owain and his men infilt r a t e d t he couple's home (asssumed by historians to be either Cilge rran C a s t l e o r Little Cenarch) and set fire to the buildings. When Gerald was w o k e n b y t he noise, Nest advised him to escape by climbing out through t h e p r i v y hole. Owain then seized Nest and her children. However, some s o u r c e s suggest that she went with him willingly. After the "abduction", O w a i n a p C adwgan carried her off and she had a male child from him Rober t F i t z S tephen , thus starting the FitzStephens line.
This upset Henry I so much that the incident started a war. Gerald's in f l u e n ce was such that Owain and his father soon lost much of their terr i t o r y o f Powys as a result of Owain's actions. Owain himself was oblige d t o g o i n t o exile in Ireland. When he returned, in 1116, Gerald hunted h i m d o w n a nd killed him. The "Annals of Cambria" record 1116 as t he dat e o f O w a i n's death. 
1399 I45506  Verkerk  Jan Janse  Abt 1626  Between 10 Nov 1688 and 6 May 1689 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1400 I45506  Verkerk  Jan Janse  Abt 1626  Between 10 Nov 1688 and 6 May 1689 

In 1663 Jan and his wife left their home in Buren, Guelderland to bring their five children to Nieuw Amsterdm. At the time the children were 9,8,6,5, and 1. The voyabe was on the ship Rosetree. They settled in Nieuw Utrecht (Brooklyn). Mayke signed jan's will so she was living in 1688.

Early Dutch Settlers in New Amsterdam:
Jan Janse, the common ancestor of the family, emigrated in 1663 from Buren in Gelderland, as per Riker's Newtown, with wife and 5 children, from Buurmelzen (a town on the river Linge near Buren), as per rec. of the marriage of his dau. Geertje, and settled in N.U., where he owned large tracts of land. On the assessment rolls of N.U. of 1675, 76, 83 and 93; mag. in 1679 and 84, on Dongan's patent of 1686. Census of 1698 and took the oath of allegiance there in 1687. 
1401 I7176  Vermandois  Adalbert  Abt 924  Abt 8 Sep 987 

His birth place and year is unknown, estimate 924 based on brother Hugh's birth 920. Other sources estimate his birth year as early as 915. 
1402 I7214  Vermandois  Adelaide  Abt 910  10 Oct 960 

Adele was both a Carolingian as well as a Robertian Frankish noblewoman w h o w a s t h e Countess of Flanders (934-960).
[[Category:House of Vermandois]]
[[Category:County of Flanders]]
[[Category:House of Flanders]]
[[Category:Carolingian Dynasty]]
== Biography ==Adele was both a Carolingian as well as a Robertian Fran k i s h n o blewoman who was the Countess of Flanders (934-960). Wikipedia. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele_of_Vermandois A d e l e o f V ermandois]

===Name===*Adele Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry : A S t u d y i n Colonial and Medieval Families. Kimball G Everingham, Edi tor. S a l t L a ke City, Utah: By the Author, 2013. Volume V, p. 485 *A d �l e < ref name="henry"> Stewart Baldwin. Heribert II, The Henry P roje c t . F i rst uploaded 23 May 2007, revised 2008, 2011. http://sbaldw .ho m e . m indspring.com/hproject/prov/herib002.htm. Accessed May 24, 2017 . [ [ D a y -1904|jhd]]

===Birth===Since birth order and birth years of the children are unknow n , e s t i mate her as the second child, born two years after Eudes, theref o r e 9 1 7 .
Cawley estimates a birth year of 910. This reflects a reading of a 907 d o c u m e nt which leads him to believe that Adele's mother was already marr i e d i n 9 0 7. Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medieval L a n d s D a tabase. Adele of Vermandois. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ H O L L A ND.htm#_Toc359915623.
Adele, born c. 910-915[1] was a daughter of Herbert II of Vermandois an d h i s w i f e, Adele, daughter of Robert I of France.[2] She died in 960 i n B r u g e s.

===Marriage===In 934 Ad�le married Arnulf I, count of Flanders.
In 934 Adele married Count Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890 - 965). Her m a r r i a ge to Arnoul was arranged to seal the alliance made in 934 between h e r f a t h er and her future husband.

There is no record of additional marriages for Adele.

===Death and Burial===She died in 960. Adele is b u r i e d a t the Abbey of Saint-Pierre de Gand in Bruges, Flemish Region, B e l g i u m.

==Issue==Together Adele and Arnulf had the following children:
#Hildegarde,[a] born c. 934, died 990; she married Dirk II, Count of Ho l l a n d . It remains uncertain if Hildegarde was Arnulf's daughter by his f i r s t w i fe, whose name was not preserved, or by his second wife Adele. S e e : H e a ther J. Tanner, Families, Friends and Allies: Boulogne and Polit i c s i n N o rthern France and England, C.879-1160 (Brill, Leiden, Netherla n d s , 2 0 04) p. 55 n. 143 #Liutgard, born in 935, died i n 9 6 2 ; m a rried Wichmann IV, Count of Hamaland.
#Egbert, died 953.#Baldwin III of Flanders.[3] (c. 94 0 - 9 6 2 ) . M arried Mathilde Billung of Saxony (c. 940 - 1008), daughter o f H e r m a nn Billung, and had issue, Arnulf II, Count of Flanders (c. 960 - 9 8 7 ) , w h o succeeded as count after Arnulf I, skipping one generation.
#Elftrude; married Siegfried, Count of Gu�nes.

== Sources ==

See also:
* https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/adele000.htm* Detlev Schw e n n i c ke, Europ�ische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europ� i s c h e n Staaten, Neue Folge, Band III Teilband 1 (Marburg, Germany: J. A . S t a r g ardt, 1984), Tafel 49* The Annals of Flodoard of Reims, 916-966, e d s . & t r a ns. Steven Fanning: Bernard S. Bachrach (New York; Ontario, Ca n : U n i v ersity of Toronto Press, 2011), pp. 21 n. 77, 92* Detlev Schwenn i c k e , E urop�ische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europ�isc h e n S t a aten, Neue Folge, Band II (Marburg, Germany: J. A. Stargardt, 19 8 4 ) , T a fel 5* Heather J. Tanner, Families, Friends and Allies: Boulogne a n d P o l i tics in Northern France and England, C.879-1160 (Brill, Leiden, N e t h e r lands, 2004) p. 55 n. 143 
1403 I7340  Vermandois  Adelle  Abt 950  Aft 18 Oct 984 

Provides one line of descent from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror a n d f o u r l ines of descent from Charlemagne to William's wife Maud.
[[Category:Charlemagne to William the Conqueror Descent]]
==Line of Descent to William the Conqueror==
}
}Douglas Richardson Douglas Richardson. Royal Ance s t r y : A S tudy in Colonial and Medieval Families. Kimball G Everingham, E d i t o r . Salt Lake City, Utah: By the Author, 2013. Volume V, p. 485-4 8 6 < / r e f> provides one line of descent from Charlemagne to William the C o n q u e ror and four lines of descent from Charlemagne to William's wife M a u d .
:Parent: [[Vermandois-1|Robert]], 931-968
:This profile: [[Vermandois-351|Adele]], 950-984
:Child: [[Anjou-2|Ermengarde]], 966-992

== Biography ==

===Disambiguation===
[[Vermandois-351|Ad�le de Meaux]] is not [[Unknown-313332|Ad�la�de de C h �lons]]. [[Vermandois-351|Ad�le]] married [[Anjou-20|Geoffroy I Grise g o n e l le]], d. 987, count of Anjou, while [[Unknown-313332|Ad�la�de]] ma r r i e d [ [Dijon-7|Lambert, Comte de Chalon]], who died probably 978. The c o n f u s ion arises because after [[Vermandois-351|Adele's]] death, and aft e r [ [ D i jon-7|Lambert's]] death, Lambert's widow, [[Unknown-313332|Ad�la �de ] ] d i d marry [[Anjou-20|Geoffroy I Grisegonelle]].

===Name===

*Adela Vermandois
*Adele of Troyes,
*Ad�le de Troyes. *Adele of Meaux W i k i p e dia. Adele of Meaux. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele_of_Meau x . A c c e ssed May 4, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd]]
*Ad�le or Adela de Meaux,
To distinguish her from her possible sister, Ad�le or Adela will be use d f o r t h i s person, and Adelais or Adelaide for her sister, although in p r a c t i ce, all four names tend to function interchangeably.

===950 Birth and Parentage===
Baldwin states that both the date and place of birth of Adele of Troyes a r e u n k n own.
Cawley estimates a birth year of 950 Charles Cawl e y . F o u ndation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database, Champ a g n e - T r oyes. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/chamtroyes.htm#Robertdi e d 9 6 7 R obert of Vermandois]. Accessed June 6, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd]] < / r e f > o r before 950 Charles Cawley. Foundation f o r M e d i eval Genealogy Medieval Lands Database. [http://fmg.ac/Project s / M e d Lands/ANJOU,%20MAINE.htm#GeoffroyIdied987B fmg.ac][http://sbaldw.h o m e . m indspring.com/hproject/prov/adela001.htm Adela de Meaux]. W i k i p e dia shows her birth year as about 934 without further citation, but that date is not consistent with the 931 birth yea r o f h e r f a ther Robert.
Adele of Troyes was the daughter of Robert, Count of Meaux and his wife A d e l a i s, alias Werra. daughter of Giselbert, count o f C h a l o n and Troyes. Detlev Schwennicke, Europ �i s c h e S tammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europ�ischen Staaten , N e u e F o lge, Band III Teilband 1 (Marburg, Germany: Verlag von J. A. S ta r g a r dt, 1984), Tafel 49. Cited by Wikipedia. Adele of Meaux. https : / / e n .wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele_of_Meaux. Accessed May 4, 2017. [[Day- 1 9 0 4 | jhd]]
Cawley notes that she was long regarded as the sister of Robert and the r e f o r e daughter of Heribert, but that recently, historian K.F. Werner s h o w e d t hat she is instead his daughter. Cawley e s t i m a tes a marriage year of 965 based on the birth year of her eldest d a u g h t er. Baldwin states that she is sometime fa l s e l y s hown as the daughter of Heribert II, who died in 943, count of V e r m a n dois, who was actually her grandfather. Bald w i n g o e s on to identify scholars who have asserted that, including Mabi l l e . < r ef> �mile Mabille, Introduction au Chroniques des Comtes d'Anjou ( S o c i �t� de l'Histoire de France, vol. 155, Paris, 1871). Cited by Stew a r t B a l dwin, The Henry Project. Ad�le de Troyes http://sbaldw.home.min d s p r i ng.com/hproject/prov/adele001.htm. First Uploaded 23 May 2007, re v i s e d 2 4 April 2008. Accessed June 6, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd]]
Baldwin notes that the major medieval source for Ad�le's parentage is a n e l e v e nth century collection of Angevin genealogies, which includes a g e n e a l ogical table of Ad�le's relatives and clearly makes her a daughter o f c o u n t R obert of Troyes. The count Heribert who witnessed the 974 cha rt e r c o u ld not be Heribert II, who died in 943, but either Heribert II' s s o n H e r ibert le Vieux, count of Omois, or the latter's nephew Heriber t l e J e u n e, son of count Robert of Meaux and Troyes. Furthermore, mak in g t h i s A dele to be the daughter of Heribert II would require him to h a ve t w o d a ughters of the same name, since he already has a well documen t ed d a u g hter, Ad�le.

===965 Marriage to Geoffroi===
About 965 she married, as his first wife, [[Anjou-20|Geoffroi I Grisego n e l l e ]], Count of Anjou (958/960-987), Count of Chalon (979-987), son o f F o u l q ues II the Good, Count of Anjoy, by his wife Gerberge. Geoffroy I "Grisegonelle" Comte d'Anjou, was son of Foulq u e s I I C o mte d'Anjou and his first wife Gerberge [de Maine] (-21 Jul 9 8 7 ) < r e f name="fmgadela"/> Stewart Baldwin. The Hen r y P r o j ect.
[http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/prov/adele001.htm Adele]Fir s t u p l o aded 23 May 2007, Minor revision uploaded 24 April 2008. Based o n t h e f o l lowing bibliography:*Cart. S.-Aubin = Bertrand de Broussillon, C a r t u l aire de l'abbaye de Saint-Aubin d'Angers, 3 vols. (Angers, 1903).* L o t ( 1 9 01) = Ferdinand Lot, "Herbert le Jeune et la succession des comt �s c h a mpenois", Annales de l'Est 15 (1901), 265-283.*Mabille (1871) = �m i l e M a bille, Introduction au Chroniques des Comtes d'Anjou (Soci�t� de l ' H i s t oire de France, vol. 155, Paris, 1871).*Poupardin (1900) = Ren� Po u p a r d in, "G�n�alogies angevines du XIe si�cle", M�langes d'Arch�ologie e t d ' H i s toire (Paris, Rome) 20 (1900):199-208.


===974 Charter===
In a charter dated 6 March 974, Ad�le donated her hereditary domains to S a i n t - Aubin in Angers. Witnesses included, among others, her husband Geo f f r o y , sons Foulques and Geoffroy, and count Heribert .

===978 Death===
Adela de Meaux, who was living at the time of the 6 Mar 974 charter, di e d s o m e t ime after that. Her actual date and place of d e a t h i s u nknown.
Since her husband remarried in 979, a death date for Adela of 978 is a p l a u s i ble estimate. Bachrach gives a death year of 982 Bernard S . B a c h r ach, Fulk Nerra the Neo-Roman Consul, 987-1040 (Berkeley & Los A ng e l e s : University of California Press, 1993), p. 11 Cited by Wikipedia . A d e l e o f Meaux. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele_of_Meaux. Acce sse d M a y 4 , 2 017. [[Day-1904|jhd]] which would appear contradic te d b y t h e 9 79 remarriage.
Wikipedia reports that she was buried in the St. Aubin Abbey, Angers.

===979 Husband's Second Marriage===
After Adela's death, Geoffroy married, second, on 2 or 9 Mar 979, Ade l a i s , w idow of Lambert Comte de Chalon, and they had one child: Maurice . < r e f n ame="fmgadela"/> Lambert I, Count of Chalon-sur-Saone, died 22 F e b 9 7 8 . < ref name="ra5485"/>

===987 Geoffroi's Death===
Geoffroi I, Count of Anjou, in turn was slain in battle at Marcon (near C h a t e a u-du-Loir) 21 July 987, and was buried at Saint-Martin de Tours. H i s w i d o w, the second Adele, was living in 999.

==Issue==

===Documented Children===
Geoffroi and Adele had two sons and two daughters b o r n b e t ween 965, when they married, and 978, her presumed date of death . G e o f f roi and his second wife Adelais had a son, Maurice.
Douglas Richardson simply dates the births of all four children as betw e e n 9 6 5 a nd 974.
#[[Anjou-2|Ermengarde de Bretagne]], daughter of Geoffroi and Adele, wa s b o r n , s ay, 966, and married Conan I of Rennes, born about 950, who di ed i n 9 9 2 . B aldwin notes that (1) Rodulfus Glaber states that Conan ma rri ed a s i s t er of count Foulques of Anjou; (2) the Chronicle of S. Flo re nt sa y s t h at Geoffrey was son of Conan by a sister of Foulques; and ( 3 ) th e A n g evin genealogical collection states that Judith, wife of Rich a rd o f N o r mandy, was the daughter of Conan by his wife Ermengarde, daug h te r o f G e offroy of Anjou. Baldwin further notes t h a t c h r onological considerations place Ermengarde as a child of Geoffro y ' s f i r st marriage to Ad�le de Troyes. Sometimes Ermengarde and her s i s t e r G erberge are conflated into one person, "Ermengarde-Gerberga" Detlev Schwennicke, Europ�ische Stammtafeln: Stammtafe ln z u r G e s chichte der Europ�ischen Staaten, Neue Folge, Band III Teilba nd 4 ( V e r l ag von J. A. Stargardt, Marburg, Germany. 1989), Tafel 817. C ited b y W i k i pedia. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_I,_Count_of _Anjo u G e o f frey I Count of Anjou] Accessed June 6, 2017. [[Day-1904|jh d]] < / r e f > Baldwin, however, notes that "there is no good reason to id enti f y G e o ffroy's daughters Ermengarde (wife of count Conan of Rennes) a nd G e r b e rge (wife of count Guillaume IV of Angoul�me) as the same perso n, a s i s s o m etimes done #[[Anjou-5|Gerberga d'Anjou] ], d a ug h t er of Geoffroi and Adele, born, say, 968, married Guillaume IV , C o u n t o f Angouleme. She died after 988. Ademar de Chabannes states that count Guillaume (IV) was m a rr i e d t o Gerberge, sister of count Foulques ["Andegavensis" in one man u s c r i pt], who must chronologically be Foulques III. Depoin cites a cha r t e r w h ich gives the name of Guillaume's wife as Girberga. #[[Anjou-69|Foulques d'Anjou ]], or Foulques III Nerra, Count o f A n j o u , son of Geoffroi and Adele . Histori� Andeg av e n s i s names his birth year as 970, and his death at Metz on 21 Jun 10 4 0 w i t h b urial at Beaulieu-lez-Loche, Abbaye de Saint-Pierre).Hist o r i � A n degavensis, allegedly written by Foulques IV "Rechin" Comte d'An j o u , n a mes "Goffridus Grisagonella pater avi mei Fulconis". succeeded f a t h e r 9 87 as FOULQUES III "Nerra/the Black" Comte d'Anjou. "Fulco A n d e c a vorum comes" relinquished rights to the bishop of Angers "pro anim a p a t r i s mei Gauffredi et matris Adel�" by charter dated 17 Jan 1020. < r e f n a m e="fmgadela"/>#[[Anjou-158|Geoffrey d'Anjou]] or Geoffroi, son o f G e o f f roi and Adele. Bachrach suggests a birth year of 971. Geoffrey ("Gauzfredi filii eius") is named by his mother " A d e l a " in the 6 March 974 charter by which she donated property to Sain t - A u b in d'Angers and is living at that time Geoffrey of Anjou (971-977), died young. B e r n a rd S. Bachrach, Fulk Nerra the Neo-Roman Consul, 987-1040 (Unive rs i t y o f C alifornia Press, 1993), pp. 11-12. Cited by Wikipedia. [htt p s : / / en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_I,_Count_of_Anjou Geoffrey I Count o f A n j o u ] Accessed June 6, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd]]

===Falsely attributed children===

Baldwin notes the following falsely attributed children:
#Bouchard (Barbatus), supposed father of Bouchard de Montmorency. Bouc h a r d i s p art of a late attempt to fabricate an origin for the house of M o n t m o rency#Ad�la�de (in fact a sister), mother of qu e e n C o n stance. One example of this comes from a late fabricated geneal o g y w h i ch was published with the cartulary of Trinit� de Vend�me. Cons t a n c e 's mother Ad�la??de was a sister of Geoffroy

===Children formerly linked which have been delinked===
#[[Ch�lons-20|Hugues (Ch�lons) de Ch�lons]], born Dijon 1030 has been s h o w n a s t he child of [[Dijon-7|Lambert]] and [[Vermandois-351|Adelaide d e V e r m a ndois]]. There are two problems with this -- (1) Lambert and Ad el a i d e w ere married to different people, and (2) Hughes was born well a f t e r t h e deaths of both of them. Therefore I have delinked Hughes from A d e l a i de.[[Day-1904|Day-1904]] 19:06, 5 March 2017 (EST)

==Sources==
 
1404 I9628  Vermandois  Heribertus  Abt 850  907 

Herbert I (c. 848/850 - 907) or Heribertus I, Count of Vermandois, Coun t o f S o i s sons, and lay abbot of Saint Quentin and Saint-Crépin.[1] He w as a C a r o l ingian aristocrat who played a significant role in Francia.

Herbert was the son of Pepin of Vermandois and one great-grandson of Pe p i n o f I t aly, son of Charlemagne. He was possibly a matrilineal descend a n t o f t h e Nibelungids. His early life was unknown. Herbert became coun t o f S o i s sons and count of Vermandois before 889, including the strongh ol ds o f P é r onne and Meulan, and was probably charged with defending the O i s e a g a inst Viking intrusions.[1] 
1405 I7495  Vermandois  Isabel  Abt 1080  Abt Feb 1147 

The exact date of Isobel's birth is not known, but she is thought to ha v e b e e n s till a young girl (proably around 12) when she caught the eye o f R o b e r t Beaumont, count of Meulon. Beaumont wanted both Isobel an d th e e l e v a ted social standing that a marriage to the granddaughter of King H e n r i I w o uld give him. 
1406 I9627  Vermandois  Pepin  Abt 815  Abt 850 

Pepin first appears in 834 as a count to the north of the Seine during t h e r e i g n of his granduncle Louis the Pious, Son and successor to his Gr e a t G r a ndfather Charlemagne aged 17 and then appears as same again in 8 4 0 a g e d 2 3.In that year, he supported his 45 year old uncle Lothair I a g a i n s t his aged great uncle,the 62 year old Louis the Pious. 
1407 I1132  Vipont  Robert  Abt 1164  Bef 1 Feb 1228 

Robert de Vipont(d. 1228), administrator and magnate, came of a family t h a t t o o k its name from Vieuxpont-en-Auge (Calvados) in Normandy. He was t h e y o u n ger son of William de Vieuxpont (d. in or before 1203), who beca m e a n i m p ortant Anglo-Scottish land owner, and his wife, Maud de Morvil l e ( d . c . 1210), whose father Hugh ( in 1170 one of the assassins of Tho m a s B e c ket) forfeited the barony of Westmorland in 1173. Robert's elder b r o t h e r, Ivo, inherited their father's estates in Northamptonshire and N o r t h u mberland, while Robert had entered royal service by 1195, and was c u s t o d ian of the honours of Peverel, Higham Ferrers, and Tickhill in the l a t t e r y ears of Richard I' s reign.
But he achieved much greater eminence under John. At first he was princ i p a l l y employed in Normandy, especially as a paymaster of troops and di r e c t o r of military works, including those on Rouen Castle, and in 1203 h e b e c a m e bailli of the Roumomois. His services were rewarded by the gra nt o f V i e u xpont itself, formerly held by an uncle who had joined the Fr enc h, a n d a l so by grants in England. In February 1203 he was given cust od y o f t h e c astles of Appleby and Brough, to which the lordship of West m or la n d w as added a month later; then in October 1203 custody during pl e a s u r e was changed to a grant in fee simple, for the service of four kn i g h t s , and Vieuxpont had become one of the leading barons in northern E n g l a n d.
He was also to be given a number of valuable wardships, while his wife , I d o n e a , the daughter of John de Builli, whom he married before June 1213 , b r o u g ht him lands in Bedfordshire and a claim to the Yorkshire honour o f T i c k h ill. After leaving Normandy with John in December 120 3 Vieuxpon t w a s i n f r equent attendance on the king until the end of 1205, when he b e c a m e i ncreasingly involved in northern administration. 
1408 I45979  Visel  Stanley Augustus  21 Dec 1889  14 May 1952  Glen Haven Cemetery 
1409 I43892  Vitebsk  Maria of  Abt 1310  Yes, date unknown 

Maria of Vitebsk (died before 1349) was the first wife of Algirdas, fut u r e G rand Duke of Lithuania (marriage took place around 1318).

Very little is known about her life. The only child of a Russian prince Y a r o slav, Maria was the only heir to the Principality of Vitebsk. After h e r f a ther's death ca. 1345, Vitebsk fell permanently under control of A l g i rdas and other Gediminids. 
1410 I9614  von Bayern  Welf  Abt 770  Bef 825 

Welf (Hwelf) is the earliest documented ancestor of the Welf dynasty (s o m e t i mes known as Guelph, Guelf, Guelfe). His name is perhaps a shorte n e d f o r m of Welfhard or Bernwelf.Cawley; Hiebl
The first time he appears in the records is in the ''Gesta Hludowici im p e r a t oris'' (Life of Emperor Louis the Pious), written by [https://en.w i k i p e dia.org/wiki/Thegan_of_Trier Thegan of Trier] in about 836-837, T h e gan of Trier where he is mentioned as the father of Louis' s e c o n d w ife, Judith; married in 819. 
1411 I8237  Von Habsburg  Albrecht  10 Aug 1397  27 Oct 1439 

Albert the Magnanimous KG, elected King of the Romans as Albert II (10 A u g u st 1397 - 27 October 1439), was emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and a m e m b er of the House of Habsburg. By inheritance he became Albert V, Duke o f A u s tria. Through his wife (jure uxoris) he also became King of Hungar y, C r o atia, Bohemia, and inherited a claim to the Duchy of Luxembourg.

Albert was born in Vienna as the son of Albert IV, Duke of Austria, and J o a n na Sophia of Bavaria.

He succeeded to the Duchy of Austria at the age of seven on his father' s d e a th in 1404. His uncle Duke William of Inner Austria, then head of t h e r i valing Leopoldinian line, served as regent for his nephew, followe d b y h i s brothers Leopold IV and Ernest the Iron in 1406. The quarrels b e tw e en the brothers and their continued attempts to gain control over t h e A l bertinian territories led to civil war-like conditions. Neverthele s s , A lbert, having received a good education, undertook the government o f A u s tria proper on the occasion of Leopold's death in 1411 and succeed ed , w i th the aid of his advisers, in ridding the duchy of the evils whi c h h a d arisen during his minority.[3] 
1412 I8231  Von Habsburg Österreich  Elizabeth  1436  30 Aug 1505 

Elizabeth of Austria (German: Elisabeth von Habsburg; Polish: Elżbieta R a k u szanka; Lithuanian: Elžbieta Habsburgaitė; c. 1436 - 30 August 1505) w a s Q u een of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the wife of King C a s i mir IV of Poland.[1] Orphaned at an early age, she spent her childho o d i n t he court of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III. As one of the thre e s u r viving grandchildren of Emperor Sigismund, she had a strong claim t o t h e k ingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia. That made her an attractive brid e f o r a P olish prince. The Polish nobility, seeking to increase Polish i n f lue nce in Hungary and Bohemia, pursued marriage with Elizabeth since s h e w a s born and finally succeeded in 1454. Her marriage to Casimir was o n e o f t he most successful royal marriages in Poland.[2] She gave birth t o t h i rteen children, eleven of whom survived to adulthood. Four of her s o n s w ere crowned as kings. 
1413 I8561  Von Oldenburg  Anna  12 Dec 1574  2 Mar 1619 

Originally lived in Old Somerset House, it was a sprawling and irregula r c o m p l ex with wings from different periods in a mixture of styles on t he b a n k s o f the Thames. In 1603 when Queen Anne moved in, she renamed i t D e n m a rk House. 
1414 I7071  Von Oldenburg  Christian  1 Feb 1426  21 May 1481 

Christian I (February 1426 - 21 May 1481) was a Scandinavian monarch un d e r t h e K almar Union. He was king of Denmark (1448-1481), Norway (1450- 1 4 8 1 ) a nd Sweden (1457-1464). From 1460 to 1481, he was also duke of Sc h l e s w ig (within Denmark) and count (after 1474, duke) of Holstein (with i n t h e H o ly Roman Empire). He was the first king of the House of Oldenb u r g . 
1415 I7335  Von Oldenburg  Dietrich  1390  14 Feb 1440 

Dietrich or Theoderic of Oldenburg (c. 1398 - 14 February 1440) was a f e u d a l l ord in Northern Germany, holding the counties of Delmenhorst and O l d e n b urg. He was called "Fortunatus", as he was able to secure Delmenho r s t f o r h is branch of the Oldenburgs.

Dietrich was the father of Christian I of Denmark, who would go on to s t a r t t h e current dynasty of the Danish throne. 
1416 I9607  Von Ringelheim  Matilda  Abt 892  14 Mar 968 

Matilda was the daughter of Saxon Count Dietrich Ringelheim, a descenda n t o f W i d ukind, who fought against Charlemagne, and Reinhild Friesland. S h e w a s b o rn about 892 in Enger, Sachsen, East Francia. As a young girl , s h e h a d b een sent to the monastery of Herford, where she had been giv en a l i t e r ary education.

She became so renowned for her lovely face and good works that she attr a c t e d t he attention of Duke Otto of Saxony, who betrothed her to his so n , H e i n rich Liudolfing I (the Fowler).

Matilda founded many religious institutions including the Abbey of Qued l i n b u rg. She was later canonized.
: Our knowledge of St. Mathilda's life comes largely from brief mention s i n t h e R e s Gestae Saxonicae (Deeds of the Saxons) of the monastic his to ri a n W i dukind of Corvey, and from two sacred biographies (the vita an t i q u i or and vita posterior) written, respectively, c. 974 and c. 1003.

After Henry the Fowler's death in 936, St. Mathilda remained at the cou r t o f h e r s on Otto, until a cabal of royal advisors is reported to have a c c u s e d her of weakening the royal treasury in order to pay for her char i t a b l e activities. After a brief exile at the Westphalian monastery of E n g e r , S t. Mathilda was brought back to court at the urging of Otto I's f i r s t w i fe, the Anglo-Saxon princess Queen Edith.

St. Mathilda was celebrated for her devotion to prayer and almsgiving; h e r f i r s t biographer depicted her (in a passage indebted to the sixth-ce n t u r y v ita of the Frankish queen Radegund by Venantius Fortunatus) leav i n g h e r h usband's side in the middle of the night and sneaking off to c h u r c h t o pray. St. Mathilda founded many religious institutions, includ i n g t h e c anonry of Quedlinburg, Saxony-Anhalt, a center of Ottonian ecc l e s i a stical and secular life and the burial place of St. Mathilda and h e r h u s b and, and the convent of Nordhausen, Thuringia, likely the source o f a t l e a s t one of her vitae. She was later canonized, with her cult lar ge ly c o n f ined to Saxony and Bavaria.

Her feast day is 14th March. 
1417 I9683  Von Sachsen  Gerberga  10 Jun 914  5 May 984 

Gerberga of Saxony (c. 913 - 5 May 968/9 or 984?) was a Queen of France b y m a r r i age to Louis IV of France between 939 and 954. She ruled as rege nt o f F r a n ce during the minority of her son Lothair in 954-959.

She was a member of the Ottonian dynasty. Her first husband was Gilbert , D u k e o f L orraine. Her second husband was Louis IV of France. Contempo ra r y s o u rces describe her as a highly educated, intelligent and forcefu l p o l i t ical player.

She was the second daughter of Henry the Fowler, King of Germany, and h i s s e c o nd wife, Matilda. Her older brother was Otto I of Germany. 
1418 I1629  Wallace  William  Jan 1272  23 Aug 1305 

William Wallace (born c. 1270, probably near Paisley, Renfrew, Scotland-died August 23, 1305, London, England) was one of Scotland’s greatest national heroes and the chief inspiration for Scottish resistance to the English king Edward I. He served as guardian of the kingdom of Scotland during the first years of the long and ultimately successful struggle to free his country from English rule.

Wallace was the second son of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Elderslie in Renfrewshire. The elder Wallace was a minor landowner and a vassal of James, 5th steward of Scotland. In 1296 King Edward I of England deposed and imprisoned the Scottish king John de Balliol and declared himself ruler of Scotland. Sporadic resistance had already occurred when, in May 1297, Wallace and a band of some 30 men burned Lanark and killed its English sheriff. Joined by Sir William Douglas (“the Hardy”), Wallace next marched on Scone, drove out the English justiciar, and attacked the English garrisons between the Rivers Forth and Tay. The Scottish steward, Robert the Bruce (later King Robert I), and others now gathered an army, but it was forced to surrender at Irvine by Sir Henry de Percy and Sir Robert de Clifford (July 1297). Wallace, however, remained in action “with a large company in the Forest of Selkirk,” according to a contemporary report made to Edward. Wallace laid siege to Dundee but abandoned it to oppose, with Andrew de Moray, an English army that was advancing toward Stirling under John de Warenne, earl of Surrey. 
1419 I8749  Walters  Casper Joseph  1715  8 Aug 1756 
On January 21, 1742, Casper Walter warranted 400 acres of land in Antrim Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, in the Conococheague settlement. This farm became part of Cumberland County in 1750, and the 1750 tax list for Antrim Township, Cumberland County lists Casper Walter. This farm is now located in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, near the city of Greencastle.

In 1749, Casper Walter also purchased land in Augusta County, Virginia, (New Hampshire County, West Virginia), near the city of Romney, where his son Ephraim settled in 1765.

On Sunday morning, July 8, 1756, the farm in Cumberland (now Franklin) County was attacked by a small band of Indians. Casper Walter, who had been sitting on the porch, reading his Bible, was instantly killed. His wife, Barbara, was tortured but survived. She later married, as her second husband, Henry Householder, of the same place. The three younger Walter children were murdered by the Indians, but the four eldest were spared and carried off by them. These children were: John, born 1743, Ephraim, born 1744, Mary, born 1745, and Rebecca Regina, born 1746 (others say 1736, which seems less likely, given the ages of her siblings, and family accounts placing her at ten years of age when carried off by Indians). 
1420 I8650  Walters  John  20 Jan 1757  27 Jun 1846 
SAR Patriot #: P-312887
State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A120159
Qualifying Service Description:
Private, Capt Joseph Irwin's Company, Colonel Brodhead's Regiment, PA Line
SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004

On Sunday morning, July 8, 1756, the farm in Cumberland (now Franklin) County was attacked by a small band of Indians. John's father, who had been sitting on the porch, reading his Bible, was instantly killed. His wife, Barbara, was tortured but survived. The three younger Walter children were murdered by the Indians, but the four eldest, including John Walters, were spared and carried off by them. 
1421 I7893  Warenne  William  Abt 1055  24 Jun 1088 

William de Warenne died from wounds received at the Siege of Pevensey o n 2 4 J u n e 1 088, at Lewes, Sussex, England, and was buried beside his fi rs t w i f e , Gundreda, at the Chapter-house, Priory of St Pancras (Lewes P r io r y ) , Lewes, East Sussex . Their burial locations were lost until in 1 8 4 5 - 4 7 the railway to Brighton was built across the site of the priory a n d a m o n g the finds were lead caskets thought to contain the bones of Wi l l i a m d e Warenne and his wife Gundrada, the founders of t h e priory. T h e l e a d c askets are decorated with rope-mouldings and diagonal ornament a t i o n i nscribed WILLEMS and GUNDRADA respectively. Presently the church o f J o h n t h e Baptist, Southover High Street in Lewes, East Sussex, has th e l e a d c a skets of William de Warenne and wife Gundrada in a special cha pe l a l o n g with the black marble tombstone of Gundrada. The bones found i n 1 8 4 5 w e re reburied under the stone.

Circa 1054 Duke William gave him the castle of Mortemer, which had been f o r f e i ted by his kinsman, Roger de Mortimer, after the Battle of Morteme r i n F e b r uary of that year. Probably at the same time he acquired lands a t B e l l e ncombre, the castle of which became the caput of the Warenne bar on y i n N o r mandy.
In 1066, William was one of the Norman barons summoned by William, Duke o f N o r m a ndy, to a Council on hearing that Harold had been crowned King a ft e r t h e d eath of the Confessor. He took part in the invasion of Englan d a n d w a s p resent at the Battle of Hastings. Given Ditchling in Sussex b y W i l l i am the Conqueror which family held for many generations. 
1422 I26019  Warren  Richard  Abt 1580  1628 

yDNA HAPLOGROUP: E-M35 (E-FTC19215)

Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order).

Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628. The only record of his death is found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth."

All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general and President Ulysses S. Grant; President Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon. 
1423 I45368  Warrners  Willemke  1610   

more info plz 
1424 I25226  Webb  Deborah  25 Oct 1728  9 Feb 1789 

Information on this person can be found in an article titled ''Col. Mil e s B r e w ton and Some of His Descendents'' in vol. 2 (April 1902) of the S o u t h C a rolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine at pages 128-152.
"William Pinckney, the ninth child of William Pinckney and Ruth (Brewto n ) P i n c kney, on 26 Nov., 1761, married Deborah (Webb) Miles, (widow of J e r e m i ah Miles, Planter, of "White House" Plantation, Ashepoo. They had t h r e e c h ildren and lived on their Ashepoo plantation." Powell, Mary P i n c k n ey. Back Over Home: The Heritage of Pinckneys of Pinckney Colony, B l u f f t on, South Carolina. Columbia, South Carolina: R. L. Bryan Company, 1 9 8 2 a n d 1 996. Pages 30-31, 52.


== Sources ==
 
1425 I8482  Weire  John  1618  7 May 1671  John Weire was a Virginia colonist. Major John Weir (Weyer, Weyre, Weye) settled in Old Rappahannock County. In 1666 he had three grants of land, aggregating 6,570 acres. He was Burgess for Rappahannock at the sessions of March 1658-1659, March 1659-60, and 1660/61-1676. 
1426 I7891  Welf  Albrecht  1236  15 Aug 1279 

Of the House of Welf, was Duke of Braunschweig-Lü neburg from 1252 to 1 2 6 9 a n d t he first ruler of the newly created Principality of Brunswick- W o l f e nbatel from 1269 until his death. 
1427 I7314  Welf  Conrad  Abt 824  876 

Conrad II, a member of the Bavarian branch of the Welfs, was Comte d'Au x e r r e a nd Marquis of Tranjurania. In 858, at the coaxing of Charles th e B a l d , h is cousin, he and his brother betrayed Louis the German when h e s e n t t h em on an espionage mission and went over to Charles, who rewar de d t h e m h andsomely because he had lost his Bavarian honores. He acted a s D u k e o f T ransjurane (Upper) Burgundy from then until about 864. 
1428 I27512  Weller  Andrew  11 Apr 1773  29 Jul 1834  German (now Brick) Reformed Church 
1429 I27512  Weller  Andrew  11 Apr 1773  29 Jul 1834  Hopewell Cemetery 
1430 I27637  Weller  Andrew  22 Mar 1799  29 Oct 1875  Heatons Point Cemetery 
1431 I27869  Weller  Eliza Ann  25 Dec 1827  25 Dec 1893  Reed Cemetery 
1432 I46016  Weller  Heinrich Johann  9 Dec 1716  1787  W. Camp Luth Church 
1433 I6945  Wentworth  Mary Love  24 Jan 1559  17 Apr 1627 

mtDNA HAPLOGROUP: I4a

The English origins of Mrs. Mary Brewster are not known. A number of theories have been proposed over the years, including maiden names such as Wentworth, Love, Wyrall, and others. However, no proof to support any of these hypotheses has been found.

We know that Mary was born about 1569 because she stated she was 40 years old in an affidavit filed in Leiden, Holland on 25 June 1609. She was presumably from the vicinity of Doncaster, Yorkshire or Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, as she married William Brewster in that area about 1592 and had their first son Jonathan in Scrooby a year later. She next had a daughter Patience, born about 1600 or somewhat earlier. About 1606, the church congregation began more formally meeting at the Scrooby manor, where she and husband William resided. About this time, pressure from the English authorities was mounting, and the meetings became more and more secretive. She gave birth to another daughter at this time, which they named Fear. The couple fled just over a year later for Holland with the other members of the congregation, and in Leiden they buried an unnamed child: presumably one that had died in infancy. In 1611, she gave birth to a son they named Love, and two or three years later gave birth to their last son, whom they named Wrestling.

Mary came to Plymouth on the Mayflower in 1620 with husband William, and her two youngest children Love and Wrestling. Mary was one of only five adult women to survive the first winter, and one of only four women to survive to the so-called "First Thanksgiving" in 1621. Son Jonathan Brewster joined the family in November 1621, arriving at Plymouth on the ship Fortune. Daughters Patience and Fear came on the ship Anne in 1623. Mary died in 1627 at Plymouth, having reached about the age of 60. Husband William survived her, and would live another 17 years before he died. 
1434 I9638  Wessex  Aethelwulf  Abt 800  Abt 13 Jan 858 

King Aethelwulf ( 839 - 856 )

839 - Aethelwulf succeeds his father Egbert as King of Wessex
841 - Vikings raid Kent and East Anglia, and establish a settlement at D u b l in
842 - Many die in London and Rochester during Viking raids
844 - Kenneth MacAlpine, King of the Scots, conquers the Picts; founds a u n i f ied Scotland
845 - Vikings are defeated by a Saxon force at the River Parrett
851 - Vikings forces enter Thames estuary and march on Canterbury
855 - Aethelwulf goes on a pilgrimage to Rome accompanied by his son Al f r e d
858 - Aethelwulf returns but finds his son Aethelbald has taken control o f W e s sex
858 - Aethelwulf dies at Steyning in Sussex. His son Aelthelbald become s k i n g. 
1435 I9710  Wessex  Alfred  849  26 Oct 899 

Alfred the Great (also spelled Ælfred; c. 849 - 26 October 899) was Kin g o f t h e W e st Saxons from 871 to 886, and King of the Anglo-Saxons from 8 8 6 u n t i l his death in 899. He was the youngest son of King Æthelwulf an d h i s f i r st wife Osburh, who both died when Alfred was young. Three of A l f r e d 's brothers, Æthelbald, Æthelberht and Æthelred, reigned in turn b e f o r e h im. Under Alfred's rule, considerable administrative and militar y r e f o r ms were introduced, prompting lasting change in England.[2]

After ascending the throne, Alfred spent several years fighting Viking i n v a s i ons. He won a decisive victory in the Battle of Edington in 878 an d m a d e a n a greement with the Vikings, dividing England between Anglo-Sa xo n t e r r itory and the Viking-ruled Danelaw, composed of Scandinavian Yo r k, t h e n o rth-east Midlands and East Anglia. Alfred also oversaw the co n ve r s i on of Viking leader Guthrum to Christianity. He defended his king d o m a g a inst the Viking attempt at conquest, becoming the dominant ruler i n E n g l a nd.[3] Alfred began styling himself as "King of the Anglo-Saxons " a f t e r r eoccupying London from the Vikings. Details of his life are de sc r i b e d in a work by 9th-century Welsh scholar and bishop Asser. 
1436 I4979  Wessex  Eadgifu  Abt 910  Abt 946 

Edith of England, also spelt Eadgyth or Ædgyth (Old English: Ēadgȳð, Ge r m a n: Edgitha; 910-946), a member of the House of Wessex, was a German q u e e n from 936, by her marriage to King Otto I.

Life
Edith was born to the reigning English king Edward the Elder by his sec o n d w ife, Ælfflæd, and hence was a granddaughter of King Alfred the Gre a t . S he had an older sister, Eadgifu. She apparently spent her early ye a r s n ear Winchester in Wessex, moving about frequently with the court,[ 2 ] a n d may have spent her later youth, with her mother, living for a ti m e a t a m onastery.[3] 
1437 I9433  Wessex  Ealhmund  Abt 748  Aft 784 

Ealhmund was King of Kent in 784. He is reputed to be the father of Kin g E g b e r t who was King of Wessex and, later, King of Kent. Asser's The L if e o f K i n g Alfred identifies him as the son of Eafa.

He is not known to have struck any coins, and the only contemporary evi d e n c e o f him is an abstract of a charter dated 784, in which Ealhmund g r a n t e d land to the Abbot of Reculver. In this charter he is identified a s E a l m u ndus rex Canciæ. By the following year Offa of Mercia seems to h av e b e e n r uling directly, as he issued a charter without any mention of a l o c a l k i ng. 
1438 I7336  Wessex  Edgar  7 Aug 943  8 Jul 975 

King Edgar ( 959 - 975 )

959 - Edgar King of Mercia and Northumbria becomes King of all England.
965 - Westminster Abbey is founded
973 - Northern Kings submit to Edgar at Chester
975 - Edgar dies at Winchester 
1439 I5988  Wessex  Edmund  Abt 920  26 May 946 

Edmund was the son of Edward the Elder and his last wife. He was said to be 18 when he became king in 939 so he was probably born in 920 or 921.

In 937 Edmund fought alongside his half-brother in the Battle of Brunanburh, in which Athelstan defeated a coalition assembled against him: the battle was a major step towards the unification of England and was commemorated in a celebratory poem preserved in the Anglo-Sax on Chronicle.

In 939 Edmund became king of Wessex and overlord of England, following the death of Athelstan, who had brought all England under his control. But his rule over Mercia and the north of England was quickly challenged. Olaf Guthfrithson, king of Dublin, invaded and seized control of York and the northern part of what had been the Viking kingdom there. In 940 Olaf Guthfrithson sought to extend his rule further south, into Mercia: he was driven back from Northampton, seized Tamworth in a bloody encounter, and was then besieged at Leicester by Edmund. 
1440 I7348  Wessex  Edmund  Bef 990  30 Nov 1016 

King Edmund II lronside ( 1016 )

1016 - Edmund Ironside, son of Aethelred II the Unready of England, bec o m e s King. At the battle of Assandun, in Essex, King Canute II of Denma r k d e feats Edmund. They meet on the Isle of Alney in the Severn and agr e e t o d ivide the kingdom into two. Canute takes the land North of the T h a me s and Edmund the South.
1016 - Edmund is assassinated a few months later and Canute takes the t h r o ne as King Canute of England. 
1441 I9666  Wessex  Edward  874  17 Jul 924 

King Edward The Elder ( 899 - 924 )

900 - Edward the Elder, son of Alfred, crowned at Kingston-upon-Thames
901 - Edward the Elder takes the title "King of the Angles and Saxons"
902 - Eric, ruler of the Danes in East Anglia, dies in the Battle of Ho l m e
910 - Reconquest of Danelaw lands begins. The last great Viking army se n t t o r avage England is defeated by an army of Wessex and Mercia.
913 - Edward the Elder recaptures Essex from the Danes
915 - Edward is accepted as overlord by Ragnald ruler of the Viking Kin g d o m of York
916 - Edward's sister Aethelflaed of Mercia attacks and conquers most o f W a l es
916 - Vikings establish settlements at Dublin and Waterford in Ireland
918 - Edward becomes ruler of Mercia following the death of his sister A e t h elflaed
920 - Edward takes East Anglia from the Danes
923 - The Scottish King Constantine II submits to Edward
924 - Edward dies at Farndon-on-Dee near Chester leading an army agains t t h e W elsh. He is buried in Winchester. 
1442 I9636  Wessex  Egbert  775  839 

King Egbert ( 802 - 839 )

800 - Around this time the Book of Kells is written in Ireland
802 - Death of King Beorthric of Wessex
802 - Egbert returns from exile in Charlemagne and becomes King of Wess e x
825 - King Egbert of Wessex wins a decisive victory over King Beornwulf o f M e r cia at Ellendun. Wessex becomes the dominant kingdom.
827 - Following his conquest of Mercia, Egbert controls all of England s o u t h of the Humber
829 - Egbert defeats the Northumbrian king at Dore near Sheffield
830 - Wiglif of Mercia revolts against Wessex rule
830 - Egbert subdues North Wales. He is recognized as overlord of other E n g l ish kings
836 - Egbert is defeated by the Danes at Carhampton in Somerset
838 - Defeats Vikings and Cornish at Hingston Down in Cornwall
839 - Death of Egbert. He is succeeded by his son Aethelwulf 
1443 I7889  Wessex  Margaret  8 Sep 1045  Abt 16 Nov 1093 

St. Margaret was the grandaughter of King Edmund Ironside of England th r o u g h h is son Edward the Aethling. She had been exiled to the eastern c o n t i n ent with the rest of her family when the Danes overran England. Sh e w a s w e l l educated, mostly in Hungary. She returned to England during t h e r e i g n of her great-uncle, Edward the Confessor, but, as one of the l a s t r e m aining members of the saxon Royal Family, she was forced to flee n o r t h t o t he Royal Scots Court at the time of the Norman Conquest. Beaut i f u l , i ntelligent and devout, Margaret brought some of the more detaile d p o i n t s of current European manners, ceremony and culture to the Scott is h C o u r t and thus highly improved its civilized reputation. She had a t a s t e f o r the finer things in life and, in 1069, she won over the Scots K i n g , M a lcolm Canmore, and married him. Their union was exceptionally ha p p y a n d f ruitful for both themselves and the Scottish nation. Margaret w a s o n e o f t he principal agents of the reform of the Church of Scotland w h i c h w a s, at the time, at a low point in its history. Church councils n o w p r o m oted Easter communion and abstinence from servile work on a Sund a y . M a r garet founded churches, monasteries and pilgrimage hostels, incl u d i n g t he revival of Iona, the building of the tiny chapel which still b e a r s h e r name at Edinburgh Castle and establishment of the Royal Mausol e u m o f D u nfermline Abbey with monks from Canterbury. She was especially d e v o t e d to Scottish saints and instigated the Queen's Ferryover the Fort h s o t h a t p ilgrims could more easily reach the Shrine of St. Andrew. In h e r p r i v ate life, Margaret was much given to prayer, reading and ecclesi a s t i c al needlework. She also gave alms lavishly and liberated a number o f A n g l o -Saxon captives. 
1444 I7011  Wetterau  Heribert  Abt 930  992 

In 981 he followed Emperor Otto II to Italy, and in 982, he took part i n t h e d i s astrous Battle of Stilo against the Saracens. 
1445 I45024  White  William  1571  21 Feb 1620 

BAPTIZED: 25 January 1586/7 at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, England, son of Edward and Thomasine (Cross)(May) White.
MARRIAGE: Susanna Jackson, about 1614, probably in Amsterdam.
CHILDREN: Resolved and Peregrine.
DEATH: 21 February 1620/1 at Plymouth.
yDNA: R-M269 (R-ZS8379)
Important Note: The origins of William White in England were just recently discovered in 2017 in a collaborative research project by Caleb Johnson, Sue Allan, and Simon Neal. The results of this research were published in the following peer-reviewed genealogical articles:

Caleb Johnson, Sue Allan and Simon Neal, "The English Origin and Kinship of Mayflower Passengers William White and Dorothy (May) Bradford of Wisbech, Cambridgeshire," The American Genealogist, 89-2(April 2017):81-94 and 89-3(July 2017):168-188.

Sue Allan, Caleb Johnson and Simon Neal, "The Origin of Mayflower Passenger Susanna (Jackson)(White) Winslow," The American Genealogist 89-4(October 2017):241-264. 
1446 I45203  Whitehead  Charity  1737  Yes, date unknown 
GENEALOGIES OF LONG ISLAND FAMILIES, 1987 ED, VOL 1 PG 675 
1447 I45188  Whitehead  Daniel  1622  16 Nov 1668 

Daniel Whitehead was a proprietor of Hempstead in 1647, and he was in 1653 and 1663, a purchaser from the Indians of lands in Oyster Bay, Smithtown, Huntington and Lloyd's Neck. He was a patentee of Newtown, overseer of the town, magistrate, surveyor and much engaged in public affairs." The Early History of Hempstead says his will is on file but has not been found. Source: Genealogies of Long Island Families (NY G & B Rec) Vol II. p 671. 
1448 I45189  Whitehead  Daniel  1646  30 Oct 1704 
Grace Episcopal Church 
1449 I45189  Whitehead  Daniel  1646  30 Oct 1704 

In Annals of Newtown D. Fanshaw in 1852 states "Daniel was called Major, married Abigail, daughter of Thomas Stevenson and they settled in Jamaica; he was a Magistrate and representative in the Colonial Assembly from 1691 til he died; acquired a large estate and died in 1704 at age 58; left two sons, Jonathan and Thomas and several daughters, one of whom married Thomas Betts. Descendants of Major Daniel Whitehead can be found in the Field, Alsop and Moore families." 
1450 I45107  Whitman  Valentine  Abt 1627  26 Feb 1700/01  Valentine was probably the first of John Wightman's family to immigrate to America. Valentine had been in the colony long enough in 1648 to master the Indian language, for in that year he is recorded as an interpreter at the Indian trading post of Richard Smith at Wickford in Narragansett county (now North and South, Kingstown, Rhode Island. Valentine was an endentured servant to Richard Smith until earning his freedom. Valentine's residence in Wickford explains why his brother George, when he arrived in Newport in 1654, immediately went to the Wickford area in Rhode Island."
Valentine Wightman (generally spelled on Providence records as Whitman) settled first in Wickford, where he was made a freeman, 18 May 1658, but afterward removed to Providence and represented that town in the General Court in 1675. 
1451 I1111  Wilkinson  William  1612  21 Sep 1663 

William Wilkinson was the first Anglican minister sent by England. 
1452 I45337  Willjard  Annetje Andriese  Abt 1645  1709 

Annatje Andries Willjards and Wyellem Heocken were members of the at Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, Flatbush, Kings Co., Long Island, New York, on 19 November 1679 (at) Gowanus.

David William Voorhees, editor, Records of The Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of Flatbush, Kings County, New York, Vol.1, 1677-1720 (New York: Holland Society of New York, 1998), page 337 Register of the Members from the Four Villages. 19 Nov 1679. Gowanus. Willem Huijkke and wife Annetje. 
1453 I43929  Wilson  John Lloyd  24 May 1784  13 Feb 1849 

Governor of South Carolina from 1822 to 1824. 
1454 I9300  Winslow  Josiah  11 Feb 1606  1 Dec 1674 

In 1629-1631, Josiah Winslow came to New England with his brother Kenel m , o n t h e s hip "White Angel". He settled in Marshfield, MA. , and was a d e p u t y t o the General Court at Plymouth in 1643. 
1455 I8511  Wiseman  Isaac N.  18 Aug 1738  3 May 1818 

SAR Patriot #: P-322870
State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A126836
Qualifying Service Description:
SIGNED OATH OF ALLEGIANCE, BERKS CO

Additional References:
Applications with burial data. Benjamin Franklin Chapter, OHSSAR
NSDAR #856472; NSSAR #136772
OWEN, PERSONS WHO TOOK THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE IN BERKS CO, COLLS OF GEN SOC OF PA, Volume 268, pg 220, FHL ROLL #20824

Isaac was a private in the Revolutionary War under the first Reg. that went out from Burks [sic Berks] Co., Penn., Aug., 1776. (Capt., Thoms. Perrys Co., commanded by Col. Mark Bird). 
1456 I8790  Wiseman  Thomas  May 1672  14 Jul 1716 

In 1702 Mathias Van Bebber, a Mennonite, bought a tract of 6166 acres in Van Bebber township for the purpose of selling it again to a colony of Mennonites, and one of his buyers was Thomas Wiseman. (Van Bebber township, Philadelphia county) 
1457 I45449  Witt  Catherine De  10 May 1654  1734  Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church 
1458 I45449  Witt  Catherine De  10 May 1654  1734 
Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church 
1459 I7865  Woodstock  Edmund  5 Aug 1301  19 Mar 1330 

Edmund of Woodstock , Earl of Kent, was condemned to death by the award o f t h e m a g nates in the said Parliament 19 March 1329/30, and was beheade d t h e s a m e day outside the gates of Winchester Castle, Hampshire. 
1460 I45222  Woolsey  George  27 Oct 1610  17 Aug 1698 
Prospect Cemetery 
1461 I45222  Woolsey  George  27 Oct 1610  17 Aug 1698 

George Woolsey, Jr., immigrant ancestor, was a son of George Woolsey and Frances Roberts. He was born May 1616 in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, and was baptized 15 May 1616. He died at Jamaica, Long Island, 17 August 1698. He married on 9 December 1647 Rebecca Cornell, daughter of Thomas Cornell and Rebecca Briggs. They were married at the Dutch Reformed Church in New Amsterdam, where the entry read, "Jorge Woltzen, j.m. vanJarmuyden en Rebecca Cornell, j.k. uyt oudt Engelandt." George Woolsey was quite young when his parents took him and his two older brothers to Rotterdam, Holland, with the Pilgrims in their Search for Religious freedom. Some time after 1630 he came to America, going first to Plymouth to be with his friends. He then went on to Hew Amsterdam where Isaac Allerton, who had established a successful trading business with the dutch in New Amsterdam, took Woolsey under his guidance and in time made him manager of this business. When Allerton died in 1659, George Woolsey, Jr., and three others were made curators of his considerable estate. Rebecca Cornell Woolsey inherited half of her mother's New York property. This property, along with George's business ability, made the Woolsey family one of the wealthiest and most influential of the English settlers in New Amsterdam. George Woolsey bought a lot from his brother-in-law, Charles Bridges, where he built a large home. It is now 75 Pearl Street, New York City. He lived there until he sold it in 1668. 
1462 I6410  Woolsey  Sarah  3 Aug 1650  18 Aug 1734 
Old Newtown Cemetery,
Old Newtown Cemetery 
1463 I45602  Worth  John  19 May 1666    Tower Hill Cemetery 
1464 I45602  Worth  John  19 May 1666   
(Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S249@
PAGE "Family Tree," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org : modified 05 June 2025, 18:23), entry for John Worth (PID https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8 ); contributed by various users.
_LINK https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8
NOTE https://ark.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:LHYG-BZ8
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Jethro Worth, 1754.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-XGZ
_LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2129/records/179012
NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/2129/records/179012
_LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/27065/records/258
NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/27065/records/258
PAGE New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the Year 1850
_LINK https://search.ancestry.com/collections/61401/records/135492139
NOTE https://search.ancestry.com/collections/61401/records/135492139
PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-824 : Thu May 23 00:30:06 UTC 2024), Entry for Thomas Crosbe and Mary Worth, 13 Nov 1718.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-82W
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-82W
PAGE William M. Worth, Descendants of John Worth of Nantucket, son of William Worth and Sarah Macy., http://history.vineyard.net/worthw1.htm.
PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T : Thu May 23 01:49:10 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Anne Sarson, 8 Sep 1704.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCZ7-85T
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Joseph Worth, 1696.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-6VF
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Nathaniell Worth, 1687.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-F9Y
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Jonathan Worth, 1685.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-X31
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Richard Worth, 1692.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-FX4
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for Sarah Worth, 1708.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-ZDQ
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for William Worth, 1694.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-49Y
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5 : 15 January 2020), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1725.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3P5
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", , FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ : 15 January 2020), John Worth, 1666.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQD8-3PJ
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Sarah Worth, 1727.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHR
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Sarrah Worth, 1708.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-LHP
PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY : Thu May 23 00:29:06 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Darcas Hawes, 22 Dec 1724.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-ZXY
PAGE "Massachusetts, State Vital Records, 1638-1927", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW : Thu May 23 01:41:52 UTC 2024), Entry for John Worth and Ame Sarson, 1 Sep 1704.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FC4J-CBW
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9 : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1725.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-XL9
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for John Worth, 1706.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZSR-X2B
PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z : 5 January 2021), John Worth in entry for Darcas Worth, 1730.
_LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z
NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZS5-L4Z 
1465 I45600  Worth  William  Abt 1645  11 Nov 1724 

National Society Sons and Daughters of the Pilgrims
Worth, William c1640 Devonshire, England 1724 Nantucket, MA [unk.] Sarah Macy

https://www.societyofthepilgrims.com

William came to New England with his older half brothers, Lionel and Richard.

William stayed on Nantucket Island, Richard went to New Jersey and then up to Massachusetts where he was involved one way or the other with the Law. There is no direction as to where Lionel went.

There is only one documented child of William and his first wife Sarah Macy: John, born 19 May 1666 in Nantucket.

This information was derived from "A Genealogical History of the Clark and Worth Families" by Carol Clark Johnson; "Ancestral Roots of Certain Colonists" by Frederick Weis; "Plantagenet Ancestry" by Moriarity and from documents found on the Harvard Law Library web site. 
1466 I7839  Wrightington De Assheton  Roger  1165  Abt 1230 

Roger is not identified in Burke's Peerage's lineage of theAshton/Asshe t o n f a m i ly. However, there are certainly large spansbetween generatio ns i n B u r k e's account which would lead one to speculateabout missing ge ner at i o n s. Roger is identified as father of Thomas byseveral sources o n W o r l d C onnect.

Roger is not identified in Burke's Peerage's lineage of theAshton/Asshe t o n f a m i ly. However, there are certainly large spansbetween generatio ns i n B u r k e's account which would lead one to speculateabout missing ge ner at i o n s. Roger is identified as father of Thomas byseveral sources o n W o r l d C onnect. 
1467 I45520  Wyckoff  Garret Pieterse  1662  Bef 12 Jul 1707  Reformed Dutch Church 
1468 I45520  Wyckoff  Garret Pieterse  1662  Bef 12 Jul 1707 
Reformed Dutch Church, 
1469 I45520  Wyckoff  Garret Pieterse  1662  Bef 12 Jul 1707  Abraham Stryker Burying Ground

Abraham Stryker Burying Ground, 
1470 I45379  Wyckoff  Geertje Pieterse  Abt 1660  6 Dec 1711 
Reformed Dutch Church 
1471 I45379  Wyckoff  Geertje Pieterse  Abt 1660  6 Dec 1711 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church 
1472 I45536  Wyckoff  Jannetje Garrets  Abt 1700  22 Jun 1743 
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery 
1473 I1107  Wyckoff  Pieter Claesen  6 Jan 1625  30 Jun 1694 
Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery 
1474 I1107  Wyckoff  Pieter Claesen  6 Jan 1625  30 Jun 1694 
Pieter Claesen Wyckoff (ca. 1620 - June 30, 1694) was a prominent early figure in Kings County, Long Island, New York. He superintended the bowery (farm) and cattle of Peter Stuyvesant in New Amersfoort (present day Flatlands, Brooklyn). Pieter Claesen prospered there and acquired land and became a local justice of the peace, and was influential in establishing the Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church at the juncture of Flatbush Avenue and Kings Highway in Brooklyn, where he and his wife Grietje are thought to be buried.

Pieter arrived in 1636 or 1637. There is no record of him paying passage for the trip on the Rensselaerswyck, although he arrived in Fort Orange from New Amsterdam on the ship once the ice on the Hudson was clear enough for the trip.

His early years in the Fort Orange region was as a servant, possibly indentured, although he is recorded as having been paid a wage for six years. He is recorded as being a servant to Symon Walichsz who lived on an island in the Hudson. He eventually ended up in Flatlands, living in a home on his land for the rest of his life. He adopted the Wyckoff name when he took the oath of allegiance just seven years before his death.

Possibly the first Claesen in North America, but Pieter did not take the Wyckoff name until the British mandated that an established surname be used in 1687 when Pieter took the oath of allegiance. 
1475 I7871  Yaroslavna  Anna  Abt 1030  5 Sep 1075 

Anne of Kiev (born Anna Yaroslavna, also called "Agnes" or "Anne of Rus ' " ; c . 1 0 30 - 1075) was the Ruthenian queen consort of Henry I of Franc e f r o m 1 0 51 to 1060, and regent for her son, Philip I of France. Her pa re n t s w e re Yaroslav I the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev and Novgorod, and I n g e g e rd Olofsdotter of Sweden, his second wife. Anne founded St. Vincen t A b b e y i n Senlis.
Anna of Kiev could write and read five languages, including Greek and L a t i n . A nna could ride a horse, was knowledgeable in politics, and acti v e l y p a rticipated in governing France, especially after her husband die d . M a n y F rench documents bear her signature, written in old Slavic lang u a g e ( t hat is, "Anna Regina", "Anna the Queen"). Pope Nicholas II, who w a s g r e a tly surprised with Anne's great political abilities, wrote her a l e t t e r : "Honorable lady, the fame of your virtues has reached our ears, a n d , w i t h great joy, we hear that you are performing your royal duties a t t h i s v e ry Christian state with commendable zeal and brilliant mind." H e n r y t h e First respected his wife Anna so much that his many decrees be a r t h e i n scription "With the consent of my wife Anna" and "In the prese n c e o f Q u een Anna". French historians point out that there are no other c a s e s i n t he French history, when Royal decrees bear such inscriptions.
Anne is often credited with introducing the name "Philip" to royal fami l i e s o f W estern Europe, as she bestowed it on her first son; she might h a v e i m p orted this Greek name (Philippos, from philos and hippos, meanin g " l o v e s horses") from her Eastern Orthodox culture.

Anne of Kiev (born Anna Yaroslavna, also called "Agnes" or "Anne of Rus ' " ; c . 1 0 30 - 1075) was the Ruthenian queen consort of Henry I of Franc e f r o m 1 0 51 to 1060, and regent for her son, Philip I of France. Her pa re n t s w e re Yaroslav I the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev and Novgorod, and I n g e g e rd Olofsdotter of Sweden, his second wife. Anne founded St. Vincen t A b b e y i n Senlis.
Anna of Kiev could write and read five languages, including Greek and L a t i n . A nna could ride a horse, was knowledgeable in politics, and acti v e l y p a rticipated in governing France, especially after her husband die d . M a n y F rench documents bear her signature, written in old Slavic lang u a g e ( t hat is, "Anna Regina", "Anna the Queen"). Pope Nicholas II, who w a s g r e a tly surprised with Anne's great political abilities, wrote her a l e t t e r : "Honorable lady, the fame of your virtues has reached our ears, a n d , w i t h great joy, we hear that you are performing your royal duties a t t h i s v e ry Christian state with commendable zeal and brilliant mind." H e n r y t h e First respected his wife Anna so much that his many decrees be a r t h e i n scription "With the consent of my wife Anna" and "In the prese n c e o f Q u een Anna". French historians point out that there are no other c a s e s i n t he French history, when Royal decrees bear such inscriptions.
Anne is often credited with introducing the name "Philip" to royal fami l i e s o f W estern Europe, as she bestowed it on her first son; she might h a v e i m p orted this Greek name (Philippos, from philos and hippos, meanin g " l o v e s horses") from her Eastern Orthodox culture. 
1476 I5205  York  Amos  15 Oct 1730  30 Oct 1778 

SAR Patriot #: P-325994
State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service DAR #: A129644

Birth: 13/15 Oct 1730 Stonington / New London / CT
Death: 30 Oct 1778 Voluntown / Windham / CT

Qualifying Service Description:
TAKEN PRISONER TO QUEBEC IN 1778
Prisoner 1778 at Westmoreland Co, PA

Additional References:
MCHENRY, REBEL PRISONERS AT QUEBEC, 1778-1783, pg 2
Craft, History of Bradford Co, PA, 1878, pg 71

Spouse: Lucretia Miner
Children: Lucretia; Hannah; Barentha; Wealthy/Welthea Ann; Manassah Miner/Minor; Keziah; 
1477 I44819  York  Edward William  28 Jul 1605  1704  Saint Dunstan and All Saints' Church 
1478 I18  Young  Peter Nelson  6 Apr 1833  6 Oct 1881 

Born Per Nilsson in Skogshuset, Veinge Parish in Halland, Sweden. After coming to America changed name to Peter Nelson Young; family story is that he was youngest or younger among many Nilssons. Emigration certificate issued from Allered nr. 2 in Veinge parish in 1854 to America. Came to Ottumwa Co. Iowa. There he met Anna Johanna Persdotter, from Knared parish in Halland, Sweden. They married in Iowa. Came across the continent by wagon and mule train from Council City, Nebraska through the Donner, Lake County and settled in Stockton. Landed in Stockton with only $1.50 in their pockets but because they had mules he got a job in Rural Cemetery. Part of pay was a house to live in and cemetery plots. He, his wife, two young daughters who died in early life, his daughter Clara Matilda Young Byrd Little, her second husband Mr. Little and other family members are buried there. The husband of one of his daughter's, Anna May Young Kidder, provided for perpetual care and so the graves can be viewed easily on well-kept grounds. 


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