USA > New York > Schenectady County > Schenectady County, New York : its history to the close of the nineteenth century > Part 10
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This committee met often, and on the 8th of May, 1775, resolved that their future meetings should be held at the house of William White, located on Church street, where is now the residence of the Hon. John A. Deremer. The building was burned down in the dis- astrous conflagration of 1819.
It was further resolved, that all the members of the committee attend the general meeting of the committees of safety, to be held at Albany, on the 10th inst.
From the minutes of May 16th, 1775 :
" Received a letter from the chairman of the committee at Albany acquainting this board that Daniel Campbell, Esq., has a quantity of gunpowder in store at Albany, which he wishes to take out, but this committee refused him that liberty until they acquainted this board of the same.
" Having taken the contents of said letter into consideration, and foreseeing the evil consequences that may attend the powder falling into the hands of our enemies,
" Resolved, That this board will purchase the said powder from Daniel Campbell, for the use of the inhabitants of this township and others who may stand in need thereof."
Extract from the minutes of May 24th, 1775 :
" Resolved, That this board do now purchase 335 lbs. of gunpow- der from Daniel Campbell, Esq., at 3s. per lb.
" Resolved, That said powder be delivered in custody of John Post and John G. Lansing, and that they dispose of it to the public as hereinafter directed. Said Post and Lansing are ordered to dispose of the powder at 3s. 9d. per pound ; 3s. Iod. by the half-pound ; 4s. by the quarter, and not to dispose of any of it to any person who lives out of the township without an order from a member of the committee."
104
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
From the minutes of May 28th, 1775 :
" A sub-committee from the county of Tryon waited on this board to inform us of the state of affairs in that county, which they looked upon to be dangerous in respect to the Indians, and requested a supply of powder.
" Resolved, To furnish them with fifty pounds of powder."
From the minutes of May 29th, 1775 :
"In consequence of a request of the committee of Albany to raise one company of men for the Continental service to go to Ticon- tarog (Ticonderoga), consisting of one captain, one lieutenant, one ensign, three sergeants, three corporals, one drummer, one fifer and fifty privates.
" Resolved, That Cornelius Van Dyck is appointed captain, Benj. Hilton, lieut., and Cornelius Van Slyck, ensign, and that the utinost dispatch be made in raising said company ; their pay to be as follows, viz .:
"Captain, per month, 6 pounds ; lieut., per month, 4 pounds ; ensign, per month, 3 pounds; sergeants, per month, 2 pounds, 8 shillings; corporals, per month, 2 pounds, 4 shillings ; drummer, per month, 2 pounds, 4 shillings ; fifers, per month, 2 pounds, 4 shillings ; privates, per month, 2 pounds, all lawful money of New England.
" Resolved, That every officer and soldier belonging to any of the companies now raised or to be raised within this township, sign the association recommended by the honorable the Continental Congress, and that no person muster or appear under arms in any of the com" panies who do not comply with this resolve.
" Resolved, That instructions be immediately given to Captain Van Dyck for raising his company."
From the minutes of May 31st, 1775:
" Captain Van Dyck made application to this board for provision for his men.
" Resolved, That Captain Van Dyck's men be boarded for the present at the houses of John Wilson and Robert Moston (Moyston), at the rate of one shilling, New York currency, per day per man."
IO5
MINUTES. CONTINUED.
From the minutes of 4th August, 1775 :
"This board being informed that Daniel Campbell, Esq., and Alexander Ellise intend going up to Niagara and from thence to Montreal,
" Resolved, That Messrs. Campbell and Ellice be sent for and examined relative to their intentions of going up the country.
" Said Campbell and Ellice being sent for and present, declared upon their honor that they were going up the country on their pri- vate business, and that they would not carry any letters or messages of news to or from any person, who was inimical to the American cause.
" Resolved, That Messrs. Campbell and Ellice be permitted to go, and that a certificate be given thein."
It will be seen that Messrs. Campbell and Ellice did not possess in any eminent degree the confidence of their fellow citizens. They have left no descendants. If they had there would be no occasion for shaine. They were honest, loyal-hearted Englishmen and never in any way betrayed their adopted country.
From the minutes of January 14th, 1776 :
" Captain John Mynderse with the officers of the Minute Men made their appearance before this board with a number of inen, and set out immediately in sleighs for Albany.
" Resolved, That orders be immediately sent to Captain John Van Patten to place guards at William DeGraff's, Tunis Swart's and Lewis Peck's, to prevent any unfriendly persons or letters front pass- ing upwards.
" Resolved, That the following letter be sent to James McMaster and the committee of Warrensbush :
" Sir-We being suspicious that news inay be carried to Johnstown of what is now going on here, we are about to place guards on both sides of the river to prevent any person from passing upwards who are not known to be friends of the American cause ; we, therefore, request you will take such steps as will prevent any news passing through Warrensbush, and that you will examine all letters you are suspicious of."
Here follow entries of the apprehension and trial of several per-
106
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
sons charged with being enemies to the American cause, and resulted in committing some of them to jail at Albany, among them George Murray, Joseph Kingsley and George Ramsey.
The following extract from the minutes of December 29, 1775 is given :
"This board having taken into consideration the custom of the inhabitants of this place of firing guns on New Year's day, and find- ing said custom to be attended with an unnecessary waste of powder, which ought to be particularly prevented at this time,
" Resolved, That the magistrates be applied to, to use their authority in putting a stop to said custom."
From the minutes of April 13, 1776.
" James Ellice applied to this board for a certificate of his charac- ter to General Schuyler, in order to obtain a pass from him to go up the country,
" Resolved, That on his taking the following affidavit, that the trade he carries on is here, and that he intends to carry on if per- mitted up the country, is entirely on his own account, and that he is noways bound to give or be accountable to either James Phynn, or Alexander or Robert Ellice for any part of the profits arising from said trade."
Which having been accomplished, the following certificate was given to him :
" This is to certify that the bearer, Mr. James Ellice, hath signed the General Association, and hath not, to our knowledge, done any- thing against the American cause of Liberty.
Given under my hand,
DIRK VAN INGEN, Chairman.
Schenectady, April 1, 1776."
" James Ellice informed this board that his brother, Robert, intends going up the country this spring, and that he intends send- ing his clerk, George Forsith, up the country."
Whereupon the following letter was written by the board :
107
APPLICATIONS FOR PASSPORTS.
"IN COMMITTEE CHAMBER AT SCHENECTADY,
April 13, 1776.
" HONORED SIR-James Ellice, who was just now with this board and obtained a certificate that he hath signed the General Associa- tion, informed us that his brother, Robert Ellice, intends going up the country to settle his business there, and that James Ellice intends to send his clerk, George Forsith, up the country. We beg to acquaint you that neither of the above named persons hath ever signed the General Association, and we look on thein to be enemies to the American cause of Liberty.
(Signed) " We are, etc.
" To the Hon. Philip Schuyler, Major General."
From the minutes of April 17th, 1776.
" Received a letter fromn Daniel Campbell, Esq., requesting a recom- mendation from this board, in order to obtain a passport from General Schuyler to send goods up the country to Messrs. Andrews and Meldrum.
" Resolved, That Mr. Campbell cannot have a recommendation from this board to General Schuyler.
" Henry Miller and John Jeffries mnade application for passports to go down the country.
" Resolved, To give said Miller and Jeffries passports."
From the minutes of April 22d, 1776 :
"James Stewart, Charles Martin, John Robinson and Andrew McFarland made application to this board for certificates in order to obtain passports from General Schuyler to go up the country.
" Resolved, That a certificate be given to each of thein, mention- ing that they have not signed the General Association, but in other respects have appeared to be true friends to the American cause.
" Robert Ellice and Charles Morrison mnade application to this board for certificates, in order to obtain passports to go up the country.
" The board being of opinion that they were both enemies to the cause of American liberty, thereupon
"Resolved, That they cannot have certificates from this board "
108
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
It will, from these few extracts, be seen that our revolutionary fathers early considered vigilance the hand-maid of liberty, and with a few more extracts illustrating the severity of the times, the priva- tions and hardships under which our indomnitable forefathers strug- gled during the period that tried inen's souls, we close the quotations.
The use of hard money was absolutely forbidden. The following extract from the minutes of June 2d, 1779, will show how rigidly this enactinent was enforced :
" Information being given to this board that John Empie has sold yeast for hard money, he being sent for acknowledged that his wife had received some for yeast, but did not refuse to receive paper cur- rency as was alleged against him, and declared that he did not know it was forbid ; thereupon,
" Resolved, That the said Empie pay all the hard money back again to those persons who have, since the publication of the regulating act, paid hard money to said Empie or his wife for yeast, and they are desired to pay said Empie, on receipt of the hard money, an equal sum in paper currency.
" It is hoped no such evil practice for the future will be carried on, as the buyer and seller will be equally considered as transgressors of said act."
Great efforts were made by the real friends of our revolutionary struggles to maintain " the continental paper currency " at the stan- dard value of gold and silver; but gold and silver, as far as was known, had not a physical existence in the country in any quantity equal to the demands of war, and therefore, as a means to sustain the value of their paper, the government prohibited the circulation of coin altogether.
With what success Ramsay's "History of the American Revolu- tion," ( Vol. II, pages 112 to 122 ), informs us : " The depreciation began at different periods in different states, but became general about the beginning of the year 1777, and progressively increased for three or four years."
" Towards the end of 1777 the depreciation was three for one; in 1778 it was six for one ; in 1779, twenty-eight for one; in 1780, sixty for one in the first four or five 1months. Its circulation was after-
109
AFTER THE REVOLUTION.
wards partial ; but where it passed it soon depreciated to 150 for one.
"In some few points it continued in circulation for the first four or five months of 1781; but in this latter period many would not take it at any rate, and they who did received it at a depreciation of several hundreds for one."
CHAPTER IX.
AFTER THE REVOLUTION-CLOSE OF THE CENTURY.
The Revolution had dealt far more gently with Schenectady than the Colonial Wars. She had her dead to mourn, sorrows for which the . only compensation was the honorable names that left their fragrance as the grass grew greener over the graves in the old Dutch grave- yard in Green street, or on their unknown little homes unmarked but not far away.
The survivors came back to rejoice in the independence of this infant land, but to suffer also in the poverty and depression that settled down heavily on a country with no money but rags, but little experienced in self-government. Not one of those infant industries that we have been of late so generously fostering till they have been nurtured into gigantic dimensions, existed. New names with no Holland gutteral or Dutch melody in them, began to be known and honored.
Gallant soldiers, officers and men, were in these regiments. Col. Abram Wemple did magnificent service. Cornelius Van Dyke, lieu- tenant colonel of the First New York Continental, Gen. Philip Schuyler's veteran regiment. John Graham, father of the late Mrs. Sarah and Deborah Graham of Washington avenue, and Major Thornton, were men who achieved high renown.
These officers were all brave, rigid disciplinarians, and brought their regiment to such perfection of drill and soldierly bearing, that
IIO
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
the First Veteran New York had no superior in the American army. It is not my intention to follow this old regiment through the early incidents of the Revolution; to speak of their brilliant gallantry at Saratoga and on the plains of Monmouth ; but, as derived from actors in the events, such was the estimate of their steadiness and valor, that, on the surrender of Burgoyne at Saratoga, Nicholas Van Rensselaer, one of its captains, a grandson of old Patroon Hendrick, was deputed by General Gates to carry a captured flag and the news . of the surrender to the anxious citizens of Albany. A regiment so brave, that at the stormning of Stony Point, July 16th, 1779, General Wayne placed this regiment in the front ; and on the stormning of the two redoubts at Yorktown, late in the afternoon of the 14th of October, 1781, where, to excite a spirit of emulation, the reduction of the one was committed to the French under the Baron de Viomes- nil, and the other to the Americans under the Marquis Lafayette. ยท Colonel Hamilton himself, of New York, led the advanced corps of the Americans, selecting for a part of his column a detachment of Van Schaick's veteran regiment, ( First New York, under Major Graham ). These troops rushed to the charge without firing a gun, and, passing over the abattis and palisades, assaulted the works on all sides, and entered with such rapidity that the redoubt was immedi- ately carried with inconsiderable loss. The redoubt attacked by the French was defended by a greater number of men and therefore occupied more time in its reduction.
Then, too, Major John Thorton of Schenectady was an officer in the Revolutionary struggle, full of daring, a hero at Saratoga, and a veteran. This was the father of the late Mrs. Volney Freeman of our place and of the late Col. William A. Thornton of the regular army.
It must be borne in mind that the militia in the day of the Revo- lution was not like the imilitia of any more modern days. They were figliters, and did as much in battle as any troop. The following is the Controller's report. (New York in the Revolution, page 9).
" The extensive fighting done within our borders, brought into active and honorable service branches of military, which, in colonies where no fighting was done, were relieved. Our militia were the
III
REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS.
heroes of many hotly contested fields. The battle of Oriskany, in its percentages of killed and wounded, the bloodiest battle of the war, was won by the militia, and Burgoyne's surrender thereby made sure. The militia bore a highly honorable part in the ever memora- ble battle of Saratoga. But many men undoubtedly performed splendid service in the emergencies which called out the militia, and then retired quietly to their homes, leaving no record of their service which can now be found.
Again, the portions of New York occupied by the whites were surrounded on almost all sides by tribes of hostile Indians, who were incited and led by still more savage whites. Brant was sometimes humane, but Butler never. The Hurons had inherited from many preceding generations the disposition to make hostile raids upon the territory of their ancient foes, the Iroquois. At the breaking out of the war the influence of Sir Williamn Johnson over the tribes of the Iroquois was almost boundless. His position as Indian agent had brought him into close relations with these tribes, and this position he seems to have honorably used and to have succeeded in convinc- ing them that he was their friend. His mantle, at his death, fell upon his son, Sir John, and his son-in-law, Col. Guy Johnson, and that they used their influence to the fullest extent to stir up Indian hostility to the patriotic citizens west of Albany, is a sad page in the history of the war. It required something more or less than patriotism to induce the frontiersinan, to leave his family with the prospects before them of that most horrible of frontier experiences, an Indian raid.
Col. Abraham Wemple was the most prominent commander con- nected with the Schenectady regiment, and from " Archives of New York, The Revolution, in the Adjutant General's office, the follow- ing roll of the regiment is taken as given below. In this regiment only the Schenectady names are given :
Col. Abraham Wemple, Lieut. Col. Christopher Yates, Major Abraham Swits, Major Myndert M. Wemple,
II2
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
Adjutant John Van Drussen, Quartermaster Gerrit G. Lansing, Quartermaster Myndert Wemple. CAPTAINS.
Thomas B. Bancker, John Mynderse, Jacob Schermerhorn,
John Van Patten, Gerrit S. Veeder,
Jellis Fonda,
Abraham Oothout,
Abraham Van Eps,
Jesse Van Slyck, Thomas Wasson.
LIEUTENANTS.
Nicholas Barhydt,
Jellis A. Fonda,
William Moore,
Jacobus Peek,
John Roseboom,
Jacob Sullivan,
John Thornton,
Daniel Toll,
Andries Van Patten,
Cornelius A. Van Slyck,
Philip D. Van Vorst,
Arent S. Vedder,
Francis Vedder,
Philip Vedder,
Gerrit S. Veeder, Jr.,
Walter Vrooman,
Lawrence Vrooman,
Myndert A. Wemple,
Jellis Yates.
ENSIGNS.
Teunis Swart,
Abraham J. Truax,
Cornelius Z. Van Sanford,
Myndert R. Wemple.
Additional names on State Treasurer's pay books:
Lieut. Robert Alexander,
Lieut. Robert McMichael,
Lieut. John B. Vrooman.
Ensign Alexander Crawford,
Ensign Fram'r Schermerhorn.
ENLISTED MEN :
Cornelius Barhydt,
Cornelius Bradt,
Jacob Barhydt,
Elias Bradt,
John Barhydt,
Ephraim Bradt,
Lewis Barhydt,
Gerret Bradt,
Cornelius Barhout,
Jacobus Bradt,
Tunes Barhydt,
Jacobus A. Bradt,
Jacobus S. Bradt,
James Barhydt, John Barope,
John Bradt,
Andrew Barope,
John S. Bradt,
II3
ROSTER OF REGIMENT.
Thomas Barope, Lewis Berherdt, Tunes Berherdt, Samuel S. Bradt, Aaron A. Bradt, Anthony A. Bradt, Aphrieam Bradt, Arent A. Bradt, Arent S. Bradt, Aron Bradt, Chas. Bradt,
Barrett Cain, Peter William Caine, Warrant Caine, Daniel Campbell,
John Kennedy, Jr., Henry Caurl, John Caurl, Thomas Caurl,
Asswerus Christianse,
Isaac Christianse, William Kittle, Daniel Kittle,
David Kittle, John Kittle, Arent Clement,
Eldert Clement, Johannes Clement, John Clement, Peter Clement, Jacob Clute, John F. Clute,
Connels DeGraff, Abraham DeGraff, Andrew DeGraff, Jesse DeGraff, John DeGraff, John N. DeGraff,
Mindart Bradt, Samuel Bradt, Samuel S. Bradt, John Brougham, Symon Brougham, Arent S. Bradt, Hendrick Brouwen, Richard Brower, Abraham Buys, James Buys,
Bartholomew Clute,
Daniel Clute, Frederick Clute,
Jacob Clute,
Jacob P. Clute,
John Clute, John B. Clute,
John Curtis Clute,
Isaac Clute,
Peter Clute,
Petrus Clute,
Adam Conde,
Simon Connor,
Manuel Consale,
David Consalus,
David Consaul,
John Corl,
John Crawford,
Isaac Criesteionse, Joseph Crawford, Adam Conde,
James DeGollier, James DeGollie, Joseph DeGollier, Abraham Dorne, John Dorne, Abraham Douw,
114
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
Simon DeGraff, William DeGraff,
John Duncan, Jr.,
Caleb Farly,
Jelles P. Fonda,
William Gerdner,
Abraham Gregg,
Isaac Glen,
Jacob Glen,
John Glen;
Cornelius Groat,
John S. Glen,
Simon Groat, Amos Groat,
Robert Gorden,
Simon C. Groot,
Joseph Gordon,
Abraham Groot,
William Gordon,
Abraham A. Groot,
Andrew Gregg,
Cornelius Grot,
James Gregg,
Abraham C. Grot,
Andrew Gregg,
Harmanus Hagadorn,
Alexander Hanna,
Alexander Hannon,
John Kennedy,
Samuel Kennedy,
John Lambert,
Abraham G. Lansing,
Cornelius Lansing,
David Little,
John C. Lansing,
John G. Lansing,
Gerrit Lansing,
John Lansing.
Abraham Lighthall,
Cornelius Mabee,
John Mabee,
John Mabee, Jr.,
Peter Mabee, Albert Mabee,
Arent Mabee,
Cornelius Mabee,
John J. Mabie,
John Marselus, Gilrt Marselus, Charles Martin, John Maseles,
Juiter Mebie,
Albert Mebie,
Henry Merseles, Egsbert Merseles,
Peter Hare, Henyost Helmer, Abraham Josling,
Abraham W. Lighthall,
George Lighthall,
Nicholas Lighthall,
Thomas Little,
Abraham Lythall,
Abraham W. Lythall,
William Lythall,
David Lythall,
John Fort, John D. Forte,
Abraham C. Groat,
Andrew Groat,
Charles Gorden,
115
ROSTER OF REGIMENT.
Patrick Mabie, Aront Mabie, Cornelius Maby,
Alexander McMichael,
Daniel McMichael,
James McMichael, Peter McMichael,
Laurence Mynderse,
Harmen Mynderse,
James McQuean,
John Marselis, Ahasweras Marselis,
Peter Mabie, Arent Ouderkerk,
George Passage,
George Passage, Jr.,
Thomas Patterson, Oliver Patterson,
Daniel Peeck,
Jacobus Vedder Peck,
James J. Peck,
Joseph Peck,
Lewis Peck, John J. Peeke,
Harmanus Peterson,
Herman Peterson,
Charles Petterson,
Oliver Petterson, Thomas Petterson,
Thomas Phillips,
Samuel Pruyne,
Aaron Putman,
Arent Putman, Arent L. Putman,
Aron L. Putman,
Cornelius Putman.
Cornelius L. Putman,
John Putman, Gradus Quack, Generadous Quackenbos, John Quackenbos,
Cornelius Ryckerman, Cornelius Rykman,
Jess Peak, Arect Peck, Cornelius Peck, Daniel Peck, Henry Peck, Jacobus Peck, James J. Peck, Jesse Peck, John Peck, Lewes Peck, Arent Peeck, Christopher Peeck,
Cornelius Peeck,
Cornelius C. Peeck, Harmanus Peeck, Harmanus H. Peeck, Harmanus J. Peeck, Henry H. Peeck, Jacobus Peeck, Jacobus H. Peeck, John Peeck, John J. Peeck,
John Reises, Andro Rynex,
Arent Merseles, Gysbert Merseles, John Mersilus, Alexander Mersilus,
John Mynderse, John R. Mynderse,
Joseph Peeck,
Lewis Peeck,
Christopher Peeck,
JI6
SCHENECTADY COUNTY: ITS HISTORY.
Jacobus Ryley,
John Robison,
Isaac Rosa,
John T, Rosa,
John Rynex, Richard Rynex,
John Rosa,
David Sacie,
John Smealle,
John Sanders,
John Smilie,
Garret Schermerhorn,
Gerrit Spitcher,
Simen Schermerhorn,
Arent Spitser,
Andrew Schermerhorn,
Gerret Spitser,
Andris Schermerhorn,
George Staley,
Aurent Schermerhorn,
Jacob Stayley,
Barnadus Schermerhorn,
John Stevens, Daniel Steward,
Bartholomew Schermerhorn,
Henry J. Schermerhorn,
David Steward,
Jacob Schermerhorn,
George Steward,
Jacob J. Schermerhorn,
James Steward,
John Schermerhorn,
John Stewart,
John J. Schermerhorn,
Daniel Stewart,
Nicholas Schermerhorn,
John Stewart,
Reijer Schermerhorn,
James Stuart,
Richard Schermerhorn,,
Jacobus Swart,
Ryer Schermerhorn,
James Swart,
Rykert Schermerhorn,
Nicholas Swart,
Simon Schermerhorn,
Reuben Schuyler,
Jacob Swits,
John Shannon,
Jacob Swits, Jr.,
William Shannon,
Jacob A. Swits,
Thomas Shennon,
Jacob J. Swits,
Christian Shutes,
Ruben Symons,
Jacobus Teller,
James Thornton,
John Teller, William Teller,
Thomas Thornton,
Jacob Ten Eyck,
John Toll,
Myndert S. Ten Eyck,
Isaac Terwilliger,
Jacobus Terwilliger,
Abraham P. Truax,
Solomon Terwilliger,
Charles Toll.
Abraham Truax,
Abraham J. Truax,
John Trumbull,
Elias Rosa,
Jacobus Rylie, Philip Rylie, Andrew Rynex,
Henry Swits,
ROSTER OF REGIMENT.
II7
Peter H. Vedder, Andrew Wagner.
Peter Van Slyck, Jellis Van Voast,
Garret Van Antwerp,
John D. Van Voast, Peter Van Voast,
Peter A. Van Antwerp,
Dirk Van Vranken,
Simon Van Antwerp,
Maus Van Vranken,
Simon J. Van Antwerp,
Maus M. Van Vranken,
John Van Antwerpe,
Nicholas Van Vranken,
Peter Van Benthuysen,
Nicholas N. Van Vranken,
Joseph Van Der Bogart,
Richard Van Vranken,
Nicholas Van Der Bogart,
Rykert Van Vranken,
Abraham N. Van DeGraff, Daniel Van Derhyden, David Van Derhyden, Daniel Van Derhyder,
Thelmes Veeder, Phil Vielie,
David Van Derhyder, Cornelius H. Van Dyck,
Albert A. Vedder,
Alexander Vedder,
Cornelius Van Dyck,
Arent Vedder,
Cornelius N. Van Dyck,
Barent Vedder,
Henry Van Dyck,
Arent A. Vedder,
Henry H. Van Dyck,
Arent T. Vedder, ,
Henry I. Van Dyck,
Cornelius Vedder,
John Van Eps, John B. Van Eps,
Francis Vedder,
John J. Van Eps,
Petrus Van Der Volgen,
Cornelius Van Der Volgen,
Frederick Vedder, Harmanis Vedder, John Vedder, John B. Vedder,
Peter Van Guysling,
Cornelius Van Guysling,
Jacob Van Guysling,
John Vischer Van Ingan,
John Van Inge, Joseph Van Ingen, Frederick D. 'Van Patten, Adam Van Patten, Frederick Van Patten,
Ian Van Patten, Nicholas Van Patten,
Nicholas Vedder, Nicholaes Vedder, Peter Vedder, Seymon H. Vedder,
Simon Vedder, Halimus Veder, Baret Veeder, Wilhilmus Veeder,
Cornelius Veeder, Gerret Veeder, Gerret S. Veeder,
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