Janet and Robert Wolfe Genealogy --- Go to Genealogy Page for Frederick Hussey --- Go to Genealogy Page for Margaret

Notes for Frederick Hussey and Margaret

1665 "Elisabet" daughter of "Fredrick Hussei" and "Margriet Hussei" was baptized on November 15 in the Dutch Reformed Church in Kingston, Ulster County, New York. [1]

1667 "Judich" daughter of "Frerick Horsjes" and "Margriet Horsjes" was baptized on October 9 in the Dutch Reformed Church in Kingston, Ulster County, New York. The witness was Lysbet Hall. [2]

1669 In September, Frederick Hussey was appointed an overseer for the newly established town of Marbletown in New York. In The History of Kingston, Schoonmaker states, [3]

On the 9th of September, 1669, at a council before Governor Lovelace, it was ordered that the garrison at Esopus be disbanded and dismissed of their military employment. It was also ordered that a commission … go up to Esopus to regulate the affairs of the place and "of the New Dorp."
This commission commenced their sessions on the 17th of September, 1669, and closed their labors on the 29th of that month. … On the 25th of September they passed an ordinance changing the name of the town from Sopus and Wiltwyck to Kingston …
The commissioners located the sites for the two new villages. The farther one they called Marbletown, from the character of the stone abounding there; and the nearer one, having been heretofore frequently referred to as "New Dorp," they called Hurley …
Separate lots in the two new villages were to be allotted to the disbanded soldiers. …
The commissioners appointed Christopher Beresford as chief magistrate of Hurley and Marbletown, and Henry Pawling officer over the Indians. Louis Du Bois and Albert Heymans were appointed overseers for Hurley, John Biggs and Frederick Hussey for Marble Town, and Thomas Chambers and William Beeckman for Kingston.

1670 An unnamed child of "Fredrick Hussy" was baptized on June 27 in the Dutch Reformed Church in Kingston, Ulster County, New York. [4] Anna Hussey who married Jochem Hendrick Schoonmaker in 1689 (see below) may have been this child.

1676 Frederick Hussey conveyed a lot of land of about 50 acres in Marblehead to Claes Tunisson. [5]

c 1676 Daughter Mary was born about this time. (Ann Griek, daughter of Alexander Griek and Mary Hossy, was baptized in Kinderhook, Albany County, New York, on 9 January 1698. [6] Alexander Gricks, son of Alexander Gricks and Mary, was baptized in New York on 21 June 1718. [7])

1679 James son of "Fredrick Hodje" and "Margriet Hodje" was baptized on June 29 in the Dutch Reformed Church in Kingston, Ulster County, New York. The witness was Mrs. Nottingam. [8]

1684 A marriage license was issued to William Haines and Elizabeth Hussy on June 15 by the secretary of the province of New York. [9] "June 15. Marriage license. William Haines of New York, and Elizabeth Hussy of Esopus." [10]

1684 Daughter Judith married Jan van Vlied. "Jan van Vlied, j.m., born in the 'Stigt van Uytregt' [Diocese of Utrecht], and resid. in Kingston and Judith Hossey, j.d., born in Kingston. First publication of Banns, 4 Oct." [11]

1686 On September 23, a warrant was issued to "Philip Wells, surveyor-general, to survey for Thomas Crandall of the city of New York, a certain parcel of unappropriated land lying on the west of the North river, bounded northward upon the lands of Frederick Hussey and company, southward by the little Esopus kill, and backward to the hills, and to make return, &c." [12]

1687 On April 7, Frederick Hussey of New York, grain measurer, submitted a petition "praying that no grain be exported from Esopus until measured." The petition was rejected by the council on the same day. [13]

1689 Anna Hussey married Jochem Hendrick Schoonmaker. "Jockom Henderixen Schoonmaecker, widower of Pieternille Sleckt, and Anna Hussy, j.d., born in Marmer [Marbletown]" were married on April 28 in Kingston, New York. [14]

Research Notes:

John Howard Abbott states, [15]

Jan Van Vliet was born in the "Stigt van Utrecht," came with his parents in 1662, and lived at Kingston. His wife was the daughter of Frederick and Margaret Hussey, and was bap. at Kingston, Oct. 9, 1667.

Frederick Hussey was an English soldier, one of twenty-five sent by Gov. Nichols to Kingston to protect the settlers there, soon after the Indian massacre in 1663; he was granted land at Kingston in 1668, and at Marbletown in 1669, where he afterward resided. His name was written in the Kingston church records variously as Hussei, Hossey, Horsjes, etc.

Jan and Judith (Hussey) Van Vliet had issue:

Achie, bap. Jan. 31, 1686, m. Joost Hoornbeek, Oct. 28, 1707.
Frederick, m. Mary Biggs, Nov. 22, 1718.
Margrietje, m. Gerrit Konstapel, before 1721.
Jan, bap. Nov. 16, 1694, m. Jesyntjen Swartwout, Mar. 11, 1725.
Ari, bap. Jan. 31, 1697, m. Lena Roosekrans, before 1734.
Willem, bap. June 4, 1699, m. Sara Van Keuren, Nov. 10, 1726.
Debora, bap. Oct. 12, 1701, m. Petrus Louw, before 1737.
Geertje, bap. Sept. 3, 1704, m. Christoffel Van Bommel, June 21, 1725.
Anna, bap. June 24, 171 1, m. Johannes Keter, before 1731.

In The History of Kingston, Schoonmaker states, [16]

Hendrick Jochemsen Schoonmaker was a native of Hamburg, in Germany. … he came in the military service of the Dutch West India Company, and was lieutenant … In the fall of 1659 his company was ordered to Esopus for the defence of the settlers in their troubles with the Indians. He was there in 1660, and at the expiration of his enlistment he settled at Esopus. A short time afterward, he was appointed lieuenant under Thomas Chambers as captain.
Hendrick Jochemsen married Elsie Janse, daughter of Jan Janse Breestede and widow of Adriaen Petersen Van Alcmaer. He died about 1681 … Hendrick left four children, Jochem Hentrick, Egbert, Engetje, and Hillitje.
The oldest son, Jochem Hendrick, who was born at Albany, married, August 1st, 1679, Petronella, daughter of Cornelis Barentsen Slecht and Tryntje Tysse Boz. After her death on the 28th of April, 1689, he married Anna, daughter of Frederick and Margaret Hussey. He was one of the pioneer settlers at Mumbaccus and one of the three original trustees named in the Rochester Patent granted by Queen Anne in 1703. …
The issue of his second marriage: Rebecca; Frederick married Anna De Witt; Jan married Margaret Hornbeek; Margaret married Mose Dupuy; Jacob married Maria Rosecranz; Elizabeth married Benjamin Depuy; Benjamin married Katrina Depuy and moved by the Mine Road across the Delaware River; Antje; Sarah married Jacobus Depuy; Daniel moved by the Mine Road across the Delaware River.

Some genealogies state that Frederick Hussey's wife was a daughter of Cornelis Teunisz Bos. There is information about his life and marriage, but so far no record found of his children or the mariage of a daughter to Frederick Hussey.

Van Laer states,

Cornelis Teunisz, from Westbroeck (Westerbroeck. Wesbroeck, Wijsbroeck); also referred to as Cornelis Theunisz bos, Cornelis Theunisz van den bos, Cornelis Theunissen schoester, and Kees schoester; signs his name Cornelis thonisen bos, He came probably from the village of Westbrock, in the province of Utrecht, and would seem from the designation schoester, to have been a shoemaker by trade. He sailed with Cornelis Maesen by the Rensselaerswyck, in 1636, and served him in the colony for six vears, beginning April 8, 1637, at wages of f100 a year. As early as April 8, 1648, he and Tennis Dircksz van Vechten are mentioned as guardians of the minor children of the late Cornelis Maesen. March 25, 1649, Cornelis Teunisz, from Westbroeck, Volckert Hansz and Conelis Vos were warned not to engage in illicit trade with the Indians; April 3, 1649, their license was revoked for not observing the ordinance. July 13. 1650, Cornelis Teunisz was ordered to send Jan Hagemans, a free trader, away from his house; April 1, 1650, he was granted the use of garden between the first and second creeks. He was a magistrate of Fort Orange, prior to Aug. 10, 1662. [17]

Cornelis Maesen (Maersz, Maertsz, Martsen, Maessen), from Buyrmalsen [Buurmalsem, in the province of Gelderland]; sailed for New Netherland as a farm laborer in 1631, having been engaged by the patroon on May 27th, for the term of three years, and went back to Holland shortly after Aug. 2, 1634, on which date he is charged in the colony with f 12:18 for clothes and brandy. Aug. 15, 1636, he entered into a new contract with the patroon and the same year he sailed by the Rensselaerswyck, accompanied by his wife Catelijntje Martens and a servant by the name of Cornelis Teunisz, from Westbroeck. On the voyage, Jan. 30, 1637, a son was born named Hendrick Cornelisz. Cornelis: Maesen arrived in the colony the second time about April 17, 1637. From that time till his death, some time before April 8, 1648, he occupied a farm on or near Papscanee Island. Cornelis Maesen and his wife were buried the same day; their effects were sold at auction Shrove Tuesday, 1649. [18]

1644 Cornelis Theunisz Boss and Marie Thomas Mingal were married on December 1 in Westbroek, Utrecht, Netherlands. The record of their marriage banns and marriage states, [19] [20]

10 Octobris 1644
Cornelis Theunisz Boss j. m. van Achtthienhoven en Marie Thomas Mingal, j. d. van Westbroeck
Den 1 Decembris bevesticht in Westb.

Achttienhoven is a former hamlet in the municipality of De Bilt, in the Netherlands. It is now considered to be part of the village of Westbroek which is also now in the municipality of De Bilt.


Footnotes:

[1] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 5, [InternetArchive].

[2] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 6, [InternetArchive].

[3] Marius Schoonmaker, The History of Kingston, New York: From Its Early Settlement to the Year 1820 (New York: Burr Printing House, 1888), 58-60, [GoogleBooks].

[4] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 7, [InternetArchive].

[5] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, Calendar of N.Y. Colonial Manuscripts, Indorsed Land Papers; In the Office of the Secretary of State of New York 1643-1803 (Albany, New York: Weed, Parsons & Co, 1864), 13, [GoogleBooks].

[6] "New York, Births and Christenings, 1640-1962", [FamilySearchRecord].

[7] "New York, Births and Christenings, 1640-1962", [FamilySearchRecord].

[8] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 12, [InternetArchive].

[9] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, ed., Names of Persons for whom Marriage Licenses were Issued by the Secretary of the Province of New York, Previous to 1784 (Albany: Weed, Parsons and Company 1860), 164, citing N.Y. Colonial MSS., vol. XXXI. p. 151, [HathiTrust], [InternetArchive].

[10] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, ed., Calendar of historical manuscripts in the office of the secretary of state, Albany, N.Y. Part II, English (1865), 110, [InternetArchive].

[11] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 508, [InternetArchive].

[12] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, ed., Calendar of historical manuscripts in the office of the secretary of state, Albany, N.Y. Part II, English (1865), 147, [InternetArchive].

[13] Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan, ed., Calendar of historical manuscripts in the office of the secretary of state, Albany, N.Y. Part II, English (1865), 164, [InternetArchive].

[14] Roswell Rahdall Hoes, ed., Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York (formerly named Wiltwyck, and often familiarly called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from their commencement in 1660 (NewYork: De Vinne Press, 1891), 510, [InternetArchive].

[15] John Howard Abbott, The Courtright (Kortright) Family, Descendants of Bastian van Kortryk, A Native of Belgium who Emigrated to Holland about 1615 (New York: Tobias A. Wright, 1922), 102, [InternetArchive].

[16] Marius Schoonmaker, The History of Kingston, New York: From Its Early Settlement to the Year 1820 (New York: Burr Printing House, 1888), 487-488, [GoogleBooks].

[17] A. J. F. Van Laer, Van Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts, being the Letters of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, 1630-1643, and other documents relating to the colony of Rensselaerswyck (Albany: The University of the State of New York, 1908), 814, [InternetArchive].

[18] A. J. F. Van Laer, Van Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts, being the Letters of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, 1630-1643, and other documents relating to the colony of Rensselaerswyck (Albany: The University of the State of New York, 1908), 806, [InternetArchive].

[19] Het Utrechts Archief, DTB_RHC_Vecht_Venen_1200, 690 Westbroek NH trouwen, 1611-1751. From this link, choose image 59, [URL].

[20] direct link to image 59, Het Utrechts Archief, DTB_RHC_Vecht_Venen_1200, 690 Westbroek NH trouwen, 1611-1751, [URL].