Annetje Daniels
From MouserAncestry
Immigrant from Holland ~1654
Date | Location | Notes | Sources | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Birth | ||||
1st Marriage | ~May 1649 | To Joseph Waldron | [1] | |
2nd Marriage | 1668 | New Amsterdam/NYC | To Harman Smeeman | [1] |
3rd Marriage | 1682 | New Amsterdam/NYC | To Coenraet Ten Eyck | [1] |
Death | ||||
Burial |
Ancestry chart segment
Generation 11 Generation 12 +-- Joseph Waldron | (????-1663) | Daniel Waldron --+ (1650-????) | +-- Annetje Daniels Sources: [1]
Step-Children
(2 children of Joseph Waldron and first wife Aeltie Hendricks )
Name | Gender | Date of Birth | Birthplace | Spouse | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sarah Waldron | F | 1646 | Amsterdam, Holland | 1) 1662 m. Jan Gerritsen van Voorst 2)1666 m. Laurens Jansen Colevelt |
[1] | |
Unknown Waldron | none | expect remained in Amsterdam with grandmother Maria Goverts |
[1] |
Children
( children of Joseph Waldron and Annetje Daniels )
Name | Gender | Date of Birth | Birthplace | Spouse | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel Waldron | M | 1650 | Amsterdam, Holland | m. 1673 Sarah Rutgers | [1] | |
John Waldron | M | ~1661 | none | died age 8, 23 Jan 1669 | [1] | |
Mary Waldron | F | 1652 | Hendrick Gerritsen Blauvelt | [1] | ||
Anna Waldron | F | 1657 | John Delamontagne. | [1] | ||
Deborah Waldron | none | died in infancy; birth order unknown |
[1] |
Places of Residence
Location | Dates | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|
expect Amsterdam, Holland | birth -~1654 | [1] | |
New Amsterdam/NYC | ~1654 | [1] | |
Sources
Ref. Num. | Description | Image of original |
---|---|---|
1 | Harlem (City of New York), Its Origin and Early Annals, by James Riker, NY 1881, digitized by Google at: http://books.google.com/books?id=0m4UAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA555&lpg=PA555&dq=%22Resolved+Waldron%22+%22frederick+williams%22&source=web&ots=3b9rpKWmgu&sig=14dLsLW4Ibr21h9MHJucJ04cWL8&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA554,M1 History of the family of Resolved Waldron, Pages 554-568 "Resolved Waldron,...was one of the most intelligent of the Harlem settlers...he had been in the printing business in Amsterdam and emigrated with his family to New Netherland, late in 1654. Received with his br. Joseph, and their w. to the fellowship of the chh. at New Amsterdam..." (The main biography continues with the line of Resolved Waldron. Footnoted (Pg 554-556) is the biography of his brother Joseph Waldron): "Joseph Waldron, "living near the hoeck of Passenger Street" in Amsterdam on the eve of his second marriage, appeared before the orphan masters, May 12, 1649...and gave bond for maintenance of his two chn. by his late w. Aeltie Hendricks; ...one of these perhaps was left at Amsterdam with its gd-mo., Maria Goverts, since it is not named in our records here, ...and Waldron was wont to order part of his salary to be paid his said mo.; the last time noticed was on Aug. 30, 1661 being two months' wages, 48 florins. He was butler to the garrison, and had charge of the magazine of the company. Waldron d. in 1663. Just before his end, sending for a notary to draw up his will, he said "there would be nothing left - but if anything whould remain, it should not be touched, but go to pay the passage of his widow who intended to leave for Fatherland". Upon these representations it appear(s) that there were "six minor children, two of whom are by a former marriage", the orphan's court of New Amsterdam, Dec. 10 1663, at the desire of the wid. Annetie Daniels, appointed Resolved Waldron, "her husband's brother" and Hendrick Jansen vander Vin...as guardians of her surviving chn. It is uncertain whether she visited Holland, as she was m. here in 1668 to Harman Smeeman and again in 1682 to Coenraet Ten Eyck. Joseph Waldron's children known to us were Sarah, Daniel, Mary, Anna, Deborah and John. Deborah d. in inf., and John when not quite 8 yrs. old... To her son Daniel and son-in-law Delamontagne, Annetie Daniels, then for the third time a wid., conveyed some city property May 10, 1688. She was afterward allowed pay by government "for tending sick soldiers".
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Source notes
- From the book "Harlem (City of New York), Its Origin and Early Annals", by James Riker",Annetje Daniels leaves land to "her son" Daniel Waldron. Annetje Daniels' surname, in the Dutch usage of the time, translates as "daughter of Daniel", which then makes it likely that Daniel Waldron was for his maternal grandfather, Daniel unknown. It is clear from this source that Joseph had already remarried before immigration. The biography re. Resolved Waldron says that he immigrated in 1654, and that he then with his brother Joseph and their wives were received into the New Amsterdam church. The implication is that Resolved & Joseph immigrated together, but the year of Joseph's immigration (& Annetje's) is not actually explicit.