USA > New York > Ulster County > New Paltz > History of New Paltz, New York and its old families (from 1678 to 1820) : including the Huguenot pioneers and others who settled in New Paltz previous to the revolution, 2nd ed > Part 31
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Isaac married Sarah DuBois. Their eldest child, Mathusa- lem, was baptized at New Paltz in 1783. Mathusalem lived at Tuthill. Isaac had four other children : Harriet, who married Goetcheous; Polley, who married Tjerick DeWitt; Abraham, who married Rachel Deyo, and Jacob I. The last named married Arriantje Schoonmaker, and after her death Ann Baird. Jacob I. carried on the blacksmith business at Libertyville, and afterwards put up a store building and long carried on the mercantile business at that place. He was a member of Assembly in 1828 and again in 1831. It was dur- ing his term of office that measures were taken to erect the first county poorhouse and he was one of the committee.
From the late Elihu Schoonmaker, who was a son of Jacob I., the information was obtained concerning the location of the Schoonmaker family in Gardiner.
THE RONK FAMILY
The ancestor of the Ronk family in Ulster county was John George de Ranke. He lived in Belgium near the French line and was educated for the ministry. About the year 1740, Bel- gium being under the dominion of Holland, having incurred the hostility of the government, de Ranke left the country and fled to America. He married his wife, Clara Battie, on board the ship.
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In 1750 he purchased of Frances Barbarie, daughter of Peter Barbarie, the patentee of that tract, 245 acres, at $2.50 an acre, on the Shawangunk Plains road. He built a log house on this tract by a big spring about the centre of the portion of this tract lying on the west side of the road, and afterwards a stone house on the extreme north part of the tract. This house was lately owned and occupied by Mr. Jacob Tears. In the same year (1750) he joined the church at New Paltz by letter and he was elected a deacon.
Some time afterwards de Ranke made a second purchase of Frances Barbarie amounting to 277 acres. Afterwards de Ranke made a purchase of land from James Erwin joining his previous purchases on the south and joining Dr. Phinney's farm.
Ronk's name and that of his wife appear at different times on the New Paltz church records as sponsors at the baptism of children, and in 1760 Ronk's name appears as sponsor at the baptism of his grandchild, Johannes Ostrander.
John George de Rank or Ronk (as it was afterwards writ- ten left four sons, Laurents, John, Philip and Cornelius ; also four daughters : Christina, who married Peter Ostrander ; Mar- garet, who married Peter Pich; Janet, who married Ezekiel Masten, and Anna, who married Dr. Plum of Plattekill.
The two brothers, John and Philip Ronk, were at Fort Mont- gomery, when it was taken by the British in the Revolutionary war, but they escaped to the mountains and returned home.
The name of Cornelius Ronk appears as a private in the 4th Regiment, Ulster County Militia.
Laurents Ronk left but one child, a son named John George. He sold his father's farm and bought the place south of the Flint, where J. J. Van Steenbergh lived before emigrating to California.
John Ronk, one of the four brothers, married a Sinsabagh.
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He left several sons, one of whom, whose name was Joseph, kept the farm.
Laurents Ronk, the eldest son of John George, was one of the organizers of the church at New Hurley in 1770.
The name of his father, John George, does not appear in the church records until three or four years after the organization of the church, when he served several years as an elder. He was probably connected with the church at New Paltz and did not unite with the church at New Hurley at its first organiza- tion. The name in this church record is spelled in various ways-de Rank, Ranke, Rank, Rancke.
John George divided his land among his four sons, Laurents, John, Philip and Cornelius. The first named received five shillings as his birthright. He had only 100 acres of land from his father, but was given £800 in money. The daughters received £250 in money.
Laurents (who is the grandfather of the late A. M. Ronk of Brooklyn), lived in a stone house which he built, south of the New Hurley church on the road to Wallkill. John, the second son, built and lived in a stone house on the road to the Wallkill. This house was of late occupied by Mr. Sutton. Philip built and occupied a stone house, still standing, adjoin- ing the Dr. Phinney place. Cornelius, the youngest son, kept his father's homestead. The houses of the four brothers are all still standing except that built by Laurents.
THE RELYEA FAMILY
The first mention we find of any Relyea is when the name of Dennis Relje appears as godfather at the baptism of a child of Hugo Freer and his wife, Mary LeRoy, in 1693. Dennis' wife's name was Joanna LeRoy. Probably she and Hugo Freer's wife were sisters. Dennis Reljea or a son of the
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same name long occupied the house on the Hudson, south of Juffrow's Hook, where the bounds of the patent struck the river. Dennis and wife, Joanna LeRoy, had several chil- dren baptized in the Kingston church-David in 1703, Claudina in 1706, Hester in 1708.
Although the first Dennis Relje had children, it is learned from the manner in which the location is mentioned in the con- tract of 1744, that they did not occupy the house on the Hudson after his death, nor do we find any further mention of the fam- ily until in 1759, when David Relyea, doubtless the same whose christening is recorded in 1703, appears as godfather at the baptism of David, child of Dennis Relje and Marytje Van Vliet at Kingston. In 1771 Dennis and his wife, Marytje Van Vliet, joined the church at New Paltz. It was probably at about this time that Dennis located at New Hurley. In the list of sol- diers of the Revolution we find the names of Dennis, Peter, John and Simeon Relje. About this time the name of Simeon also appears in the New Paltz church book. In 1793 David Relyea and his wife, Lana Ostrander, joined the New Paltz church by letter from New Hurley. In 1795 Dennis Relyea was an elder in the New Paltz church.
THE SMITH FAMILY AT SWARTEKILL
The territory lying north of the Paltz patent in the present town of Esopus, on the east side of the Wallkill, was called Swartekill by the old people, and the name is still applied to the locality a little north of Rifton. We are indebted to Mr. William Smith, the Sunday school missionary, for information concerning the early history of the Swartekill neighborhood, derived mainly from his grandfather, William Smith, as fol- lows: Probably the first settler in this neighborhood was his ancestor, Hendrick Smit, the first of the name in this country.
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He came from Holland in the same ship with Jacob Rutsen, who was the first settler at Rosendale and father-in-law of Johannes Hardenbergh, the first of the name in Ulster county. Rutsen paid Smit's passage across the ocean and the latter worked for some time to repay the money advanced. He then got a life lease for eighty acres of land on the east side of the Wallkill and included in the Hardenbergh patent. There were no definite bounds assigned to the eighty acres, except that it bounded on the south on the Paltz patent. It lay east of the Dashville falls. The house was built about 1715, at about the same date that Hugo Freer, Jr., Hendricus Deyo and Isaac LeFevre located on the Wallkill in the northern part of the Paltz patent. The annual rent paid by Smith was "a hen and a rooster." In his old days he obtained a deed for the eighty
acres, which has never been put on record. But the property has descended in the family from father to son for 175 years, and the name of the owner has alternated from William to Henry for the whole time. During the entire period there never has been a mortgage on the property. Our informant has a son, Henry, who has a son named William, so the cus- tom of naming the infant son for its grandfather has been continued to the present day.
The house, partly of stone and partly of frame, is situated a short distance east of Rifton. The very first house on the place was of logs. Some time ago an examination of the walls disclosed a small loose stone, which on being pulled out proved to be a whetstone, bearing the date 1704.
Our informant's grandfather, William Smith, was a soldier in the army of the Revolution. At the age of seventy-two he attended the gathering of Revolutionary soldiers at Kingston, in 1831, half a century after the surrender of Yorktown. He drew a pension of three dollars a month in his old age and was assigned bounty lands at Hurley.
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CHAPTER XLV
GENEALOGY OF THE FRENCH SETTLERS OF NEW PALTZ TO THE THIRD GENERATION
BY LOUIS BEVIER
The reformation in France in the sixteenth century included among its adherents many of the nobility as well as the com- mon people who, as a whole, constituted a large and influential part of the population of most of the provinces of France.
Whenever the persecutions of the government and Romish hierarchy became particularly oppressive and violent the Hu- guenots, as they were called in derision by their enemies, living in Catholic communities and under Catholic rulers, were often obliged to seek refuge from the storm in those communities, where their co-religionists were in great number so as to be able to afford them some protection, more particularly to those provinces where the Huguenot princes were in authority. These movements of the Huguenot population continued at intervals down to 1628, when Rochelle, the last of their strong- holds, was taken by Cardinal Richelieu, the minister of Louis XIII, and the power of the Huguenots as a political party was broken, and from this time all prudent persons foresaw that there remained no adequate security that the peace and tolera- tion now freely promised by the king would be maintained. They had too often proved by sad experience that Catholic princes acted on the maxim that "no faith should be kept with heretics," to trust the sincerity of the king and his advisers; hence large numbers sought asylums in the neighboring Cal- vinistic States where they might enjoy those rights and privi-
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1
MR. LOUIS BEVIER, OF MARBLETOWN
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leges which were denied them at home. So a more general emigration was inaugurated throughout the kingdom, and France lost thousands of her most quiet and industrious citi- zens to the manifest and acknowledged advantage of the Neth- erlands, England, Switzerland and the Palatine provinces. The French government from time to time increased the difficulties in the way of these fugitives until after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, in 1685, their flight was absolutely forbidden. Yet still members, by one device or another, managed to escape to their brethren who had preceded them.
About the year 1650 the band of Huguenots who afterward associated as patentees of New Paltz, began to gather from their several homes in France in the vicinity of Manheim in the Palatinate where they sojourned about ten years, during which time some of those friendships and connections were formed which survived the transplanting to the new world.
Whilst they were in the Palatinate they affiliated with the churches there and enjoyed the confidence and respect of the church officials. This is evidenced by the certificates given by the pastors to many of the emigrants on leaving for their new homes.
One of these given by Jacob Amyot, the noted pastor of the church at Mutterstadt near Manheim, to Pierre Deio, is still in possession of one of his descendants at New Paltz, by whom it is valued as a precious relic of the past. This is dated January 31, 1675, the year preceding his arrival at Wiltwyck. It is said that the heirs of Jean Hasbrouck, one of the paten- tees, held a similar certificate dated March 16, 1672, and Peter Gumaer's heirs hold a similar paper dated Moise, April 20, I686. Doubtless others of a like character were brought by each of these emigrant families.
Matthew Blanshan and his wife, Maddeleen Jorisse, and
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their son-in-law, Anthony Chrispel, with his wife, Maria Blan- shan, and three younger children of Blanshan, were the first of these refugees to set sail for the new world in the Gilded Otter, April 27, 1660. They arrived at Wiltwyck before De- cember 7, 1660, for at that date we find Dominie Blom's record of their presence at his first celebration of the Lord's Supper.
The next arrival from this band was another son-in-law of Blanshan, Louis DuBois, who, with his wife, Catharine Blan- shan, and their two young children, Abraham and Isaac, aged respectively four and two years, arrived at Wiltwyck in 1661. Matthew Blanshan and his two sons-in-law settled at the new village (now Hurley) as early as 1662. At the time of its burning by the Indians, June 7, 1663, Matthys Blanshan's two children, Louis DuBois' wife and three children and Anthony Crispel's wife and child were taken prisoners and remained among their captors about three months, when they were at length restored to their friends. It was during the efforts to recover the prisoners, held by the Indians, that attention was first drawn to the lands along the Wallkill where New Paltz was subsequently located.
The LeFevre brothers, Simon and Andre, were in Wiltwyck and united with the church there April 23, 1665. The exact date of their emigration is unknown. They were young, un- married men at this time and brought to their new home the energy and enthusiasm for the reformed faith, which char- acterized the eminent scholar of their name, Jacobus Stapulen- sis Faber or LeFevre.
Advised of the unsettled condition of the New Netherlands, no more emigrants left the colony in the Palatinate until May 17, 1672, when Jean Hasbrouck and wife, Anna, daughter of Christian Deyo, and their two daughters, Mary and Hester,
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set out from Manheim and arrived at Wiltwyck in the spring of 1673. Jean Hasbrouck and his brother Abraham (of whom we shall speak later) were originally from the vicinity of Calais before their emigration to the Palatinate.
Louis Beviere and his wife Maria LaBlan followed shortly after to New York, in 1673, but made no permanent settle- ment until 1677 when the settlement at New Paltz took place. His two children, born before that time, were baptized elsewhere.
Hugh Frere and his wife, Mary Haye, and three children, Hugh, Abraham and Isaac, arrived about 1676, but there is no record of his appearance at Wiltwyck until the purchase of the land from the Indians and patent from Andros, September 29, 1677.
About this time Christian Deyo, with Pierre Deyo and his wife, Agatha Nickol, and their child Christian, came over and accompanied by the three unmarried daughters of Christian, viz .: Maria, Elizabeth and Margaret. Maria married Abra- ham Hasbrouck, the brother of Jean, mentioned before, No- vember 17, 1676; Elizabeth married Simon LeFevre, 1676; Margaret married Abraham DuBois, 1681. Thus Christian Deyo, the oldest of the twelve patentees, gathered all of his family around him again in the Newe Paltz, as they had been before in the German Palatinate.
Abraham Hasbrouck sailed from Amstrdam in 1675 and landed at Boston, and in July rejoined his brother Jean and his other friends.
In May, 1677, Louis DuBois and his associates obtained, by purchase, the title from the Indians to all the lands from the Shawangunk mountains to the Hudson river, which were more particularly described in the patent subsequently given by Governor Andros September 29th of the same year. The Pat-
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entees as named in said Patent were Louis DuBois, Christian Doyau, Abraham Hasbrouck, Andre LeFebvre, Jean Has- brouck, Pierre Doyau, Louis Beviere, Anthoine Crespel, Abra- ham DuBois, Hugue Frere, Isaac DuBois and Simon Le- Febvre. These men and their families removed to their patent lands and there founded the village of New Paltz in the spring of the subsequent year. Here in 1683 they organized the French Reformed church, electing Louis DuBois as elder and Hugo Frere deacon. They adopted the confession of faith framed by the first Synod of the Reformed church of France in the year 1559 and the other formularies of the French Reformed church. These continued in use in the church and its school until the change from the French to the Dutch lan- guage was made, when the Heidelberg catechism took their place and the French church was merged into the Reformed Dutch church.
Below is a short account of the twelve patentee families to the third generation.
THE CHILDREN OF LOUIS DUBOIS, THE PATENTEE
The children of Louis DuBois and Catharine Blanshan were:
Abraham, b. 1657, at Manheim ; m. Margaret Deyo (daugh- ter of Christian), March 6, 1681 ; settled at New Paltz, 1678; d. October 7, 1731.
Isaac, b. cir. 1659, at Manheim; m. Marie Hasbrouck (b. Mutterstadt cir. 1662), June, 1683; settled at New Paltz, 1678; d. June 28, 1690.
Jacob, b. October 9, 1661, at New Village (Hurley) ; . m. Gitty Garretson (b. February 15, 1665), March 25, 1689; settled at Hurley ; d. 1745.
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Sarah, b. September 14, 1664, at Hurley; m. Joost Jansen of Marbletown, December 12, 1682.
David, b. March 13, 1667, at Hurley ; m. Cornelia Vernooy (b. April 3, 1667), March 8, 1689; settled at Rochester.
Solomon, b. 1670, at Hurley ; m. Tryntje Garretson (b. cir. 1671), cir. 1690; settled at New Paltz (Poughwaughtenonk) ; d. 1759.
Rebecca, b. June 18, 1671; d. young.
Rachel, b. April 18, 1675; d. young.
Louis, b. 1677; m. Rachel Hasbrouck (daughter of Abm., b. cir. 1679), January 19, 1701 ; settled at New Paltz (Nesca- tack) ; d. after 1729.
Matthew, b. January 3, 1679, at New Paltz; m. Sarah Mat- thysen (daughter of Matthys Matthysen and Tjatje Dewitt, b. April 17, 1678) ; settled at Kingston.
CHILDREN OF ABRAHAM DUBOIS
The children of Abraham and Margaret Deyo were:
Sarah, b. New Paltz, May 18, 1682 ; m. Rælif Eltinge, June 13, 1703, New Paltz.
Abraham, b. April 17, 1685; m. Maria LaSiliere; settled Somerset county, N. J.
Leah, b. New Paltz, October 16, 1687; m. Philip Ferre; settled Lancaster county, Penn.
Twins-Mary, d. young; Rachel, b. New Paltz, October 13, 1689; m. Isaac DuBois (son of Solomon), April 6, 1713; settled at PesKoine Creek, Penn.
Catharine, b. New Paltz, May 21, 1693 ; m. Wm. Donnelson, October 24, 1728; settled at Lancaster county, Penn.
Noah, b. February 18, 1700; d. young.
Joel, b. New Paltz, 1703; d. 1734.
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CHILDREN OF ISAAC DUBOIS
The children of Isaac and Maria Hasbrouck were:
Daniel, b. April 28, 1684; m. Mary LeFevre (daughter of Simon), June 8, 1713, New Paltz.
Benjamin, b. April 16, 1689; d. young.
Philip, b. May 14, 1690; m. Esther Gumær (daughter of Peter), Rochester.
CHILDREN OF JACOB DUBOIS
The children of Jacob and Gitty Gerretson were:
Magdalen, b. May 25, 1690; m. Ist, Garret Roosa, Decem- ber 30, 1710; m. 2d, Peter VanEst, October 20, 1718. Hurley.
Barent, b. May 3, 1693; m. Jacomyntje DuBois (daughter of Sol.), Pittsgrove, N. J.
Louis, b. January 6, 1695 ; m. Ist, Jane Van Vliet, April 16, 1718; m. 2d, Margaret Jansen, May 22 1720, Pittsgrove, N. J.
Geiltje, b. May 13, 1697; m. Cornelius NieuKirk, Septem- ber 3, 1737.
Gerrit, b. March 29, 1700; d. in infancy.
Isaac, b. February I, 1702; m. Ist, Næltje Roosa, August 5, 1732; m. 2d, Jannetje Roosa, October 15, 1760, Kingston. Gerrit, b. February 13, 1704; m. Margaret Elmondorf, July 18, 1730.
Catrina, b. March 17, 1706; m. Petrus Smedes, January 24, 1725, Hurley.
Rebecca, b. October 31, 1708; m. Petrus Bogardus, Septem- ber 15, 1726.
Johannes, b. October 10, 1710; m. Judith Wynkoop (daugh- ter of Corn.), December 14, 1736, Hurley.
Sarah, b. December 20, 1713; m. Conrad Elmondorf (son of Conrad), May 27, 1734, Kingston.
HISTORY OF NEW PALTZ 513
CHILDREN OF DAVID DUBOIS
The children of David and Cornelia Vernooy were :
Catrina, b. May 25, 1690; d. in infancy.
Catryn, b. April 7, 1692; m. Wm. Kool (son of Leonard).
Hanna, b. October II, 1696.
Anna, b. March 28, 1703; m. Jacob Vernooy.
Josaphat, b. March 17, 1706; m. Tjatje Van Keuren, April 21, 1730.
Elizabeth, b. October 31, 1708.
CHILDREN OF SOLOMON DUBOIS
The children of Solomon and Trintje Garretson were:
Isaac, b. September 27, 1691 ; m. Rachel DuBois (daugh- ter of Abm.), Perkiomen, Pa.
Jacomyntje, b. 1693; m. Barrent DuBois (son of Jacob), April 23, 1715, Pennsylvania.
Benjamin, b. May 16, 1697; m. Catrina Zuyland, Catskill. Sarah, b. January 1, 1700; m. Simon Jacobse Van Wagenen, November 17, 1720, Marbletown.
Catryn, b. October 18, 1702; d. in infancy.
Cornelius, b. -; m. Anna Margaret Hotaling, April 7, 1729, Poughwoughtenonk.
Magdalena, b. April 15, 1705; d. young.
Catharine, b. -; m. Petrus Mathens Louw, December 9, 1722, Poughwoughtenonk.
Deborah, b. - ; probably died young.
Hendricus, b. December 31, 1710; m. Jannetje Hotaling, April 15, 1733, Nescatack.
Magdalena, b. December 20, 1713; m. Josiah Elting (son of Roelif), May 6, 1734. New Paltz.
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HISTORY OF NEW PALTZ
CHILDREN OF LOUIS DUBOIS
The children of Louis and Rachel Hasbrouck were:
Maria, b. December 1, 1701 ; d. in infancy.
Nathaniel, b. June 6, 1703; m. Ist, Gertrude Bruyn, May 17, 1726; m. 2d, Gertrude Hoffman, Salisbury Mills, Orange county.
Mary, b. March 24, 1706.
Jonas, b. June 20, 1708.
Jonathan, b. December 31, 1710; m. Eliz. LeFevre (daugh- ter of Andries), December 25, 1732, Nescatack.
Catrina, b. October 31, 1715; m. Wessel Brodhead, January 25, 1734.
Louis, b. 1717; m. Charity Andrevelt, Staten Island.
CHILDREN OF MATTHEW DUBOIS
The children of Matthew and Sarah Matthysen were:
Louis, b. July 18, 1697.
Matthens, b. October 9, 1698.
Hiskiah, b. January 26, 1701 ; m. Anna Pierson, June 17, I722.
Ephraim, b. May 30, 1703; m. Anna Catrien Delamater.
Johannes, b. March 17, 1706; m. Rebecca Tappen, Novem- ber 16, 1728.
Tjatje, b. November 2, 1707.
Jesse, b. February, 1709.
Eliza, b. October 4, 1713.
Catrina, b. December 4, 1715.
Gideon, b. January II, 1719.
Jeremiah, b. May 18, 172I.
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HISTORY OF NEW PALTZ
THE CHILDREN OF CHRISTIAN DEYO, THE PATENTEE
Christian Deyo had five children who were all probably born before he went to Germany.
Anna, b. 1644; m. Jean Hasbrouck.
Pierre (Peter), b. between 1646-1650; m. Agatha Nickol, about 1672; settled at New Paltz, and was one of the Patentees,
Maria, b. 1653 ; m. Abraham Hasbrouck, November 17, 1676.
Elizabeth, -; m. Simon LeFevre, about 1678.
Margaret, -; m. Abm. DuBois, about 1680 or 1681. ʻ
CHILDREN OF PIERRE DEYO
The children of Pierre Deyo and Agatha Nickol were:
Abraham, b. October 16, 1676; m. Elsie Clearwater, Octo- ber, 1702. New Paltz (Village).
Mary, b. April 20, 1679.
Christian, b. 1681; m. Mary Le Conte (or as translated into Dutch DeGroff, in church records it appears in both forms), February 20, 1702.
Pierre, baptized October 14, 1683.
Margaret, baptized October 14, 1683.
Maddeline, b. April 16, 1689.
Henricus, b. October 12, 1690; m. December 31, 1715, Mar- garet Wanboom (or VanBummel). New Paltz (Bontecoe).
CHILDREN OF CHRISTIAN DEYO
The children of Christian and Mary Le Conte were:
Peter, b. 1702; probably d. young.
Jacobus, b. January 16, 1704; m. Janetje Freer, October 28, 1724; removed to Kingston before 1738.
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HISTORY OF NEW PALTZ
Moses, b. January 26, 1706; m. Clarissa Stohraad, of Hoog- drytslandt, April 17, 1728.
Maria, b. September II, 1709; m. Jeems Achmootie, Sep- tember 19, 1731, Bontecoe.
Angenieter, b. March 30, 1712; probably d. young.
Esther, b. February 27, 1715; m. Hugo Hugosen Freer, August 18, 1738.
Margaret, b. January 27, 1717; m. Marinus Van Acken, August 30, 1740 (2d wife).
CHILDREN OF ABRAHAM DEYO
The children of Abraham and Elsie Clearwater were:
Marytje, b. November 7, 1708; m. Isaac Freer, August 24, I723. New Paltz.
Wyntje, b. January 24, 1708; m. Daniel Hasbrouck.
Abraham, b. October 16, 1710; m. Elizabeth DuBois. New Paltz (Village).
CHILDREN OF HENRY DEYO
The children of Henry and Margaret Wamboom were:
Debora, b. January 27, 1717 ; m. Petrus Ostrander, Febru- ary 19, 1749. New Hurley.
Peter, Jr., b. November 9, 1718; m. Eliz. Helm, January 14, 1745. Tuthill.
Isaac, b. March II, 1723; m. Agatha Freer.
Benjamin, b. May 30, 1725 ; m. Jennek Van Vliet, Novem- ber 10, 1751. Bontecoe.
Johannis, b. November 6, 1726; m. Sara Van Wagenen, November 20, 1756. Springtown.
Christoffel, b. February 4, 1728; m. Debora Van Vliet. Springtown.
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HISTORY OF NEW PALTZ
Haggetta, b. October 19, 1729; m. John Freer, May 5, 1769. Bontecoe.
Henricus, b. 1731; m. Eliz. Beem, October 13, 1753; buried at Highland, 1805.
Sarah, b. September 16, 1733; m. Isaac Van Wagenen.
David, b. January 9, 1739.
THE CHILDREN OF ABRAHAM HASBROUCK, THE PATENTEE
Abraham Hasbrouck with his wife, Maria Deyo, emigrated in 1675 and settled at Kingston, 1676. Their children were: Anna, b. October 9, 1682; d. young.
Joseph, b. January 28, 1684 ; m: Elsie Schoonmaker (daugh- ter of Joachim), October 27, 1706. Guilford.
Solomon, b. October 6, 1686; m. Sara Van Wagenen, April 7, 1721. New Paltz (Middletown).
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