Tjerck Claessen DEWITT

Birth:
Abt 1620
Grosses Holz, Sauerland, Arnsberg, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland (Germany)
Death:
17 Feb 1700
Kingston, Ulster co, Ny, Usa
Marriage:
24 Apr 1656
New Amsterdam (New York City now), Ny, Usa
Mother:
Notes:
                   Grootholt, Zunderland - where is this?
There is a Zunderdorp in Noord-Holland

http://www.mrjumbo.com/index.html

There is much to write about Tjerck Claessen DeWitt, progenitor of most DeWitts in North America. I havenÕt had time to put together as much as IÕd like, but for now, hereÕs a very quick rundown:

He probably emigrated from near Esens in Ostfriesland (northern coast of Germany) in the early or mid-1650s. (See related page of discussion on his origins.) He married Barbara Andriessen in Manhattan on April 24, 1656. Apparently, though, they never baptized any children there. (Some say Tjerck and Barbara baptized their first son, Andries, in New York, and lived there until spring 1657, but no record exists of AndriesÕ baptism in Manhattan. When Andries posts wedding banns in Kingston, on March 4, 1682, heÕs listed as born in New York.)


We know that as early as February 1656 Tjerck was in court in Albany (Fort Orange) for fighting and for keeping company with Lutherans; we also know he lived there after he was married. (On June 25, 1657, he declares in court there that heÕs made a payment in relation to the sale of a stallion.) It seems likely that Tjerck and Barbara baptized their first children in Albany. Marriage and baptism records from Albany before 1683 have been lost.

On November 20, 1658, Tjerck arranged to lease his house in Beverwyck (Albany) to Arent Isacksz from May 1, 1659, to May 1, 1660. In September 1660 he traded his Albany property with a Madame de Hutter (or Madame Johanna De Laldt and her husband, Hon. Jeronimus Ebbink?), in exchange for land in Wiltwyck (Kingston), Òpossession to be given May 1, 1661Ó (or for two pieces of land in the Esopus?).

In 1661 Tjerck was taxed for the erection of a church in Hurley, not far from Kingston. By September 1661 Tjerck had already appeared in court in Wiltwyck (this time as a plaintiff; he won his case). On February 12, 1662, Tjerck and Barbara baptized a daughter, Jannetjen, in the Kingston Dutch Reform Church (they already had Andries and another daughter, Taatje, born in 1659). By 1662 they owned No. 28 of the ÒNew LotsÓ at Kingston. On May 28, 1663, Tjerck also bought a lot in Beverwyck from Harman Tomassen, though he doesnÕt seem to have moved there (it sounds like it was very near the property heÕd traded away in 1660). On June 7, 1663, Kingston and Hurley were almost entirely destroyed by the Indians; Tjerck fought valiantly in their defense, and his daughter Taatje was kidnapped, along with three other children. She was soon rescued.

Between then and 1668, Tjerck and Barbara baptized three more children in Kingston, where they apparently continued to live in town. In September 1664 the British took control of New Amsterdam and renamed it after the Duke of York; Colonel Richard Nicolls took over as Governor. In 1667 Tjerck opposed the British occupation of Kingston and Òrefused to keep Christmas on the day according to the English observation, but according to the Dutch.Ó (The Dutch used the old Julian calendar, which was about two weeks off from the modern Gregorian calendar used by the British.) For his recalcitrance he was beaten. In 1668 (?) Tjerck refused to sign the oath of allegiance administered by the British, though a ÒJohnÓ DeWitt (perhaps his brother Jan?) and Andries DeWitt (probably TjerckÕs 10-year-old son) did sign it.

On January 24, 1669-70 (or on April 8, 1669?), the new British Governor, Colonel Francis Lovelace, issued a permit to Tjerck to let him Òerect a house and barne with convenient outhouses for his cattle upon his own land at Esopus, lying betwixt Hurley and Kingston,Ó noting that Tjerck previously had permission from Governor Nicolls to do this and on that promise had provided all the materials to get started. This land was on the Kingston-Hurley road; the house still stands today, with a beautiful view of the valley of the Esopus Creek.

On June 25, 1672, Governor Lovelace officially deeded Tjerck the Òparcel of bush land, together with a house, lot, orchard and calvesÕ pasture, lying near Kingston in Esopus.Ó The deed was a confirmation of TjerckÕs title to the land, now that he had built on it. New Amsterdam was recaptured by the Dutch on August 7, 1673, but in February 1674 the Dutch agreed to give the colony back, and on October 11, 1674, Captain Antony Colve officially handed over control to the new English Governor, Major Edmond Andros. On October 8, 1677, Governor Andros deeded Tjerck a piece of woodland, containing about fifty acres, at Kingston in Esopus, Òto the west of the towne.Ó He had other property too.

Tjerck and Barbara had six other children whose baptisms were not recorded in Manhattan or Kingston. It seems likely they were baptized in Hurley, in the church he had helped pay to buildÑnot too far from the house and farm he built around 1670. Their last daughter, Aefje, was baptized in Kingston on January 14, 1684.

This account has been pieced together from several sources, which are not listed here yet, though I hope to post an exhaustive list soon. All that will have to wait until there's more time to write it (do watch this space). For a closer look at where Tjerck came from, have a look at my 1998 trip to Ostfriesland, Germany, in search of his Old World roots. (This set of pages includes a page with links to lots of other sites for research into Tjerck, Ostfriesland and other Dutch ancestors.)

For a closer discussion of some of TjerckÕs family relations, have a look at my excerpts from the record of baptisms in early Manhattan (the page will take a few moments to load; it's big) and at my very cursory excerpt of public records from Albany, NY, regarding Tjerck Claessen DeWitt and possible relatives.

Meantime, a few notes from more recent relatives:

E-mail excerpt, June 28, 1999, from Mary Sarah Bradley to Doug Bradley:


I've really got to stop opening big envelopes with lots of letters inside. I went into a plastic box in my closet, which at one time was the only repository of family information that I had. I was looking for the story about Marcus' demise and came across an envelope marked, "Oradell". It was late at night, but I still could not resist looking inside and reading some of the letters from Aunt Dot, Aunt Mae, my mother, Aunt Mary, etc. In a letter that Aunt Mary wrote from Kingston on August 29, 1967 she said,


"Tjerck Claessen was a contemporary of John and Cornelius DeWitt of Dordrecht. He was born in Friesland and came to Dordrecht later so does not appear in the Dordrecht archives. I've found a distant cousin of ours here in Kingston who has been working on this problem on her own.Ê.Ê.Ê. I've asked her to do the research to really prove exactly the relationship of Tjerck Claessen to the Dordrecht. He was a cousin but I think we should get his lineage as far as it is possible to do so.Ê.Ê.Ê. I've compiled records of eleven generations in this country .Ê.Ê. and I have a folder on file for each of the families on the fan-chartÊ.Ê.Ê."


She did not tell me the last name of the distant cousin, only that she was a writer and had an apartment in NYC.



Printed sources:

Record of baptisms and marriages from Kingston, New York.

Online sources:

Tjerck Claessen DeWitt in Court

Record of early marriages in the Dutch Reform Church in Manhattan, available in printed form or online

Record of early baptisms in the Dutch Reform Church in Manhattan, available online

Reproduced herein:

Wills of Tjerck Claessen DeWitt and his brother Jan, who died unmarried in Kingston, 1699 (1906 Anjou edition)

Very cursory look at public records from Albany, NY, regarding Tjerck Claessen DeWitt and possible relatives.

The Peltz Record (1948)

The History of Ulster County, New York

The Oberholtzer Genealogy
                  
Barbara ANDRIESSEN
Birth:
Abt 1640
Nederland
Death:
6 Jul 1714
Ny, Usa
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
1657
Death:
22 Jul 1710
Marr:
7 Mar 1682
 
Notes:
                   http://www.mrjumbo.com/index.html

Andries died in an accident, when a beam fell on him and pressed him to death. If he's not the earliest burial recorded in the graveyard that surrounds Kingston's Old Dutch Reformed Church, he's one of the earliest.

His stone is no longer in the graveyard: It has been taken upstairs into the church history room for safekeeping and display. It should last much longer there than outside, exposed to the elements. There is a rather large DeWitt plot near the entrance to the church offices, with probably more than a dozen DeWitts buried there, but most of the stones have literally lost their faces, so we'll never know which is which. The church keeps some old records of who was buried there, but nobody knows which grave is which unless there's a marker.

When the church was expanded, a number of graves were covered by the new building. Names of the people in those graves are inscribed on the wall inside the church itself.
                  
2
Birth:
1659
Albany, Albany co, Ny, Usa
Death:
Notes:
                   Taatje deWitt was taken as captive of the Indians when she was only four years old during the massacre at Esopus in 1663.Ê Her father was severely wounded.
                  
3
Birth:
Abt 1662
Death:
1744
4
Klaes DEWITT
Birth:
Abt 1664
Death:
 
Marr:
 
5
Birth:
14 Feb 1665
Kingston, Ulster co, Ny, Usa
Death:
Bef 12 Apr 1715
Mombaccus, Ulster co, Ny, Usa
Marr:
Abt 1691
Ny, Usa 
7
Birth:
Death:
1739
8
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
9
Birth:
Death:
1703
10
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
11
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
12
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
13
Birth:
Abt 1684
Death:
FamilyCentral Network
Tjerck Claessen DeWitt - Barbara Andriessen

Tjerck Claessen DeWitt was born at Grosses Holz, Sauerland, Arnsberg, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland (Germany) Abt 1620. His parents were Nicholas DeWitt and Taatje .

He married Barbara Andriessen 24 Apr 1656 at New Amsterdam (New York City now), Ny, Usa . Barbara Andriessen was born at Nederland Abt 1640 daughter of Andries Luycaszen and Jennetje Seybens .

They were the parents of 13 children:
Andries DeWitt born 1657.
Taatje DeWitt born 1659.
Jannetje DeWitt born Abt 1662.
Klaes DeWitt born Abt 1664.
Jan DeWitt born 14 Feb 1665.
Geertje DeWitt born Abt 1668.
Jacob DeWitt
Blocked
Lucas DeWitt
Blocked
Blocked
Blocked
Aagie DeWitt born Abt 1684.

Tjerck Claessen DeWitt died 17 Feb 1700 at Kingston, Ulster co, Ny, Usa .

Barbara Andriessen died 6 Jul 1714 at Ny, Usa .