Johannes DOPP

Birth:
Chr:
5 Jan 1695
Medard, Rheinland, Germany
Death:
Feb 1734
Rheinbeck, Dutchess, New York
Marriage:
4 May 1717
Kingston, Ulster, New York
Sources:
Internet IGI, Apr 2007
Ancestry World Tree, Apr 2007
Internet IGI, Oct 2007
Notes:
                   NAME:
Johannes aka Hans Peter

Some early researchers spelled the name Dopff.  The actual christening records for Johannes (Hans Peter) Dopp from the Reformed Lutheran Church in Medard, Germany spell the name Dopp.
Hans Peter was about 11 years older than Benjamin Franklin who was born in 1806.

                  The Family Legend

Johannes is a son of the original immigrant. He and his family fled Germany in 1709  as part  of the Palatinate Emigration.  He and thousands of others went first  to Holland.   They left Germany seeking relief from war and famine and  religious freedom. Most of those with him were Quakers.
Queen  Anne of England offered the refugees a safe haven in London.  In  1709, Johannes  and  his family accepted the offer and went to London.   They  were housed in refuge camps and empty warehouses.  So many died due to poor  living conditions (probably typhus) that the illness was called "Palatinate Fever."
In 1710, Johannes signed indenture papers pledging his and his family's  labor for  a period of two years.  The British Navy owned the indenture and, in  return, provided transportation to New York at no additional cost.
In  the colonies, Johannes helped provide supplies, principally flax for  rope and  logs for masts. He was recorded on Governor Hunter's Subsistence List  as receiving food and shelter.
After fulfilling his indenture period, Johannes and his family settled on virgin land around what is today the Poughkeepsie area and began farming.
In 1711, he signed up from Queensbury as a Palatine Volunteer for the  Expedition  against Canada. Queensbury was the palatine settlement on the east side of the Hudson River. There were 350 people there on May 1, 1711.
He was naturalized, along with many other people, at Kingston, Ulster  County, New York, in 1715.  Thus begins the story of the Dopp family in America.
Although most of the families were Quakers, Dopps fought on both sides of  the Revolution. Dopps fought in the War of 1812, both sides of the Civil War, and in all wars since then.  Dopps have been farmers, merchants, bankers, lawyers, politicians and educators.
(Story compiled from the Dopp Family Newsletter.  Although some may have been Quakers, church affiliations would indicate that most families were Lutheran.)
It is an interesting historical note that the War of the Spanish Succession (known in America as Queen Anne's War) began in 1701 and ended in 1714.  Great Britain came into being in 1707 when the English parliament passed the Act of Union that united England, Scotland, and Wales.
                  
Marytjen ECKHARDT
Birth:
Abt 1696
of Hoog-dytsland, Germany
Death:
of New York
Notes:
                   NAME:
Marytjen aka Maria Barbara
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Johan Pieter DOPP
Birth:
15 Mar 1718
West Camp, Dutchess, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   DFNL 13-3 marriage Sponsors were Peter Dopf and Christina Uhlin
                  
2
Marthan DOPP
Birth:
Abt 1720
of Dutchess, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Date implied from baptism date.
Sinnett ms., baptism date, parents names.  Research by Ed Vorwerk, Marten Dopp (Dobbs) and his family fled to Queens County, New Brunswick in 1784 because they were Tories.  Marten was jailed in Exeter, NH for a while before arriving in Canada.  They returned to Hyde Park, Dutchess Co, NY in 1790.  Marten lost two sons in the revolution, possibly John and Jeremiah.
Some early researchers spelled the name Dopff.  The actual christening records from the Reformed Lutheran Church in Medard, Germany for Marthan's father, Johannes (Hans Peter) Dopp spell the name Dopp.
                  
3
Johan Jury (Georg) DOPP
Birth:
4 Feb 1722
Dutchess, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   DFNL 13-4 baptism date
                  
4
Margaretha DOPP
Birth:
Abt 1724
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   DFNL 13-4 Date joined church, spouse name.
Some early researchers spelled the name Dopff.  The actual christening records for Johannes (Hans Peter) Dopp from the Reformed Lutheran Church in Medard, Germany spell the name Dopp.
                  
5
Maria DOPP
Birth:
Abt 1726
Death:
 
Marr:
 
6
Eva DOPP
Birth:
Abt 1728
of Dutchess, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
7
Birth:
5 Apr 1730
Dutchess, New York
Death:
6 Jun 1782
General Hospital, Manhattan, New York
Marr:
4 Feb 1758
Rheinbeck Flats, Dutchess, New 
Notes:
                   David was a resident of Staatsburg when he married Rachel Oostrander of Rhinebeck Flats on 4 Feb 1758 at Rhinebeck Dutch Reformed Church. (2167, Kelly Trans) David's last name was spelled Dop, Top and Dopp.
David Dop was on the Rhinebeck Tax Lists (Clifford Buck Copy) from 1753 to Feb 1755 and again in 1769. He was assesssed for having a son with the enemy in 1781; but rated as too poor to pay the penalty. (Gov. George Clinton papers, Vol VI, p. 653)  His sloop had been burned in 1775 and would have been a great financial loss. The son "with the enemy" was John (Johannes) and the "enemy" was the Colonial Army, Continental Line of New York.
David was about two years old when George Washington was born and Benjamin Franklin began publishing "Poor Richard's Almanac".  Three years before he married, the first postal system in America was established and Samuel Johnson published the first "Dictionary".
THE LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT
From Muster Roll of Loyal American Regiment
Corporal David Dopp In General Hospital (Died June 6, 1782)

Regimental History
Raised in the early spring of 1777 by wealthy Beverley Robinson, the LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT consisted almost entirely of New York loyalists from lower Dutchess and Westchester Counties. Robinson managed sixty thousand acres and 146 tenant farms in Dutchess County. Not surprisingly, his tenants (and relatives) accounted for a large percentage of the soldiers and officers of the regiment.
Robinson, a childhood friend of George Washington, was one of the wealthiest men in the New York colony and like any good leader, he played the game of politics well by eventually gaining access to British Commander-in-Chief Sir Henry Clinton. Robinson quickly became Clinton's friend and trusted advisor.
Robinson's men were quick to distinguish themselves. The LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT participated in the storming of Forts Montgomery and Clinton in the fall of 1777.  First to enter Fort Montgomery was Captain George Turnbull of the LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT. Turnbull took command of Major Grant's company of New York Volunteers when Grant himself was killed before the attack on the fort commenced. Sir Henry Clinton subsequently made Turnbull Lieutenant Colonel of the New York Volunteers.
The LAR was garrisoned variously at Kingsbridge (near present-day West 230th Street and Marble Hill Avenue) and Bloomingdale (close to present-day Columbia University) on Manhattan Island as well as a stint on Long Island at Flushing NY (referred to as Flushing Fly in LAR muster rolls and various Loyalist orderly books).
Men from the regiment were frequently detached to serve with other regiments -- usually for light infantry warfare.  There are three distinct examples of note:
In 1777, Captain Joshua Barnes and his company of the LAR were detached as marksmen to Emmerick's Chasseurs under the command of Andreas Emmerick and were present at Fort Montgomery in 1777. "Certain light infantry troops were known as Jagers in the German army and as chasseurs in the French and British army. Even the Germans, however, used the term chasseurs for those Jagers who were part of a regiment, as opposed to those who were in Von Wurmb's Jager Corps." (Boatner, Encyclopedia of the American Revolution)
In 1779, British Captain Patrick Ferguson took in members of the LAR to serve as rangers and riflemen on his ill-fated expedition to South Carolina -- an expedition which ended in disaster at King's Mountain.
Lieutenant Anthony Allaire of the LAR was at King's Mountain and kept a diary that became an important record of the British perspective of the battle. Allaire was taken prisoner by the rebels and treated reasonably well although he disliked a congregation of Presbyterians who forced him to listen to one of their sermons. "Horse thieves all," wrote Allaire.
Finally, Captain Morris (son of Beverley) Robinson's company was detached to the corps known as the Provincial Light Infantry under British Lt. Col. John W. Watson of the Brigade of Foot Guards. It is interesting to note LAR influence. Thomas Barclay, the Major for the LAR, served as the Major of the Provincial Light Infantry.
Political Intrigue
Besides commanding his regiment, Colonel Beverley Robinson was also deeply involved in the treason of Benedict Arnold. Sometime in 1779, Robinson wrote the following in a letter to Arnold, which urged him to help England end the war:
"It is necessary that a decisive advantage should put Britain in a condition to dictate the terms of reconciliation . . . There is no one but General Arnold who can surmount obstacles so great as these. A man of so much courage will never despair of the republic, even when every door to a reconciliation seems sealed. Render, then, brave General, this important service to your country . . . Let us put an end to so many calamities. You and ourselves have the same origin, the same language, the same laws . . . Beware, then, of breaking forever the links and ties of a friendship whose benefits are proven . . . United in equality, we will rule the universe, we will hold it bound, not by arms and violence but by the ties of commerce -- the lightest and most gentle bonds that human kind can wear."
Exile
hen the war ended in defeat for the Crown, loyalists were forced to leave America. As part of the mass exodus to Canada, the LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT left New York City5 in the transport ships Ann and Apollo and headed to Fredericton, New Brunswick where they received a land grant known as Block 12. Once there, the men of the regiment started their lives over. Some stayed. Some moved on to other parts of Canada.
The upheaval in their lives certainly didn't go unnoticed. In later years, Major Thomas Barclay of the LOYAL AMERICAN REGIMENT wrote of his former American neighbours:
"I find that those who were termed Royalists or Loyalists, in addition to their attachment to their king and country, preserve their principles of honor and integrity, of openness and sincerity, which marked the American previous to the year 1773; while those who have sold their king for a Republican Government, have adopted all the frivolity, intrigue, and insincerity of the French, and in relinquishing their allegiance, resigned at the same time, almost universally, religion and morality."
A harsh, but revealing statement of loyalist mind set.
ACTIONS (many of these in detachment strength):
t. Montgomery & Ft. Clinton NY (6 Oct. 1777) Map
Horse Neck, Conn. (25 Feb. 1779)
Stony Point NY (16 July 1779) Map
Paramus NJ (April 1780)
Monk's Corner SC under Ferguson (1780)
King's Mountain SC under Ferguson (7 October 1780)
Virginia Campaign under Benedict Arnold (Spring 1781)
Pleasant Valley NJ under Skinner (1781)
New London, Conn. Raid under Arnold (6 Sept. 1781)
Eutaw Springs SC (Sept. 1781

the Loyal American Regiments, Another View
This corps was raised almost entirely by the efforts of Colonel Beverley Robinson, a wealthy citizen of Duchess County on the Hudson River. Its officers and men were nearly all natives of the Province of New York. A few months after its organization the regiment took part in the expedition of Sir Henry Clinton against Forts Clinton and Montgomery. The loyal Americans, though little more than raw recruits, formed a part of the column that stormed and captured Fort Montgomery. After their return to New York they formed part of the garrison there.
They took part in the campaign in Pennsylvania and assisted in the capture of Stoney Point on the Hudson River May 30th, 1779. Afterwards they were engaged in the campaign in the south under Lord Cornwallis. They suffered very heavily at the disastrous battle of King's Mountain where a band of the loyalist troops, outnumbered by their enemies and surrounded on all sides, were obliged to surrender.
Col. Robinson had, as his Lieutenant Colonel, his son Beverly Robinson and others of his sons were officers in the king's service in one or other of the provincial corps. Thomas Barclay was major and Rev. John Beardsley rector of Poughkeepsie on the Hudson was chaplain. At the close of the war part of the Loyal American Regiment went to Nova Scotia and the remainder settled on the St. John River.
Col. Beverley Robinson died in England. His son, Lieut. Col. Robinson at the peace went with other loyalists to Shelburne but afterwards removed to New Brunswick and settled at Nashwaaksis in the parish of Douglas where his descendants still reside.  Many of the officers and men of this corps who settled in the province made their influence felt in their respective communities.
Rev. John Beardsley was rector of Maugerville. He was the ancestor of the Beardsleys of Woodstock. Dr. Peter Huggeford, a surgeon of the corps, was in early days a leading physician at St. John. Captain Christopher Hatch was a magistrate and colonel of militia at St. Andrews where he died in 1819 aged 75 years. Capt. Lemuel Wilmot, grandfather of the late Lieutenant Governor L. A. Wilmot, settled near Fredericton. Lieut. Anthony Allaire settled at Douglas, York County, where he died in 1839 aged 84 years; his diary which he kept during the southern campaign has been lately published by Dr. Lyman Draper in
his book on "King's Mountain and its heroes."
Lieut. John Ward was a prominent St. John merchant an active and useful citizen; he was interested in steamboating, and one of the first boats that ran between Fredericton and Woodstock was named after him; he died in St. John in 1846 in his 93rd year.   The oldest half pay officer in New Brunswick, Captain William Baillie died near Fredericton in 1832 aged 97 years. The great age attained by many of these half pay officers is very remarkable.

The Loyalist Regiments Leave New York

The number of Loyalists who left the United States at the close of the American Revolution has been variously estimated. Judge Thomas Jones, the Loyalist historian, says that Sir Guy Carleton sent away from New York 100,000 persons; perhaps 70,000 would be nearer the mark. But be the number less or more, the British commander-in-chief was obliged to put forth his utmost exertions to provide for the establishment of the Loyalists in their new homes in the various parts of the world whither they desired to go. And busily engaged as he was the summer days of 1783 sped all too quickly, both for Sir Guy and, as the events proved, for the Loyalists as well. Refugees made their way from all parts of the old colonies to New York where they embarked for all parts of the world -- some going to England, Scotland and Ireland, some to Canada, some to Nova Scotia and Cape Breton, some to Newfoundland and the Island of St. John's (now Prince Edward Island).
Those who had independent means formed companies and hired vessels for themselves; those impoverished by the event of the war were sent in fleets of transport ships to their several destinations by the British government. By the close of the summer the great majority of the loyal exiles had sailed from New York to their future homes.
Meanwhile the Provincial Regiments still remained. Sir Guy Carleton had been exceedingly anxious to hasten their departure, but the late arrival of the King's instructions relative to their disbandment, and the scarcity of transports rendered delay unavoidable. As already mentioned, Amos Botsford and his associates, and a little later Col. Edward Winslow, Muster-Master-General of the Provincial forces, had been sent to explore the St. John river with a view to the settlement of the loyal regiments in that locality. Gen. Fox, commander of the forces at Halifax, personally visited the St. John River accompanied by Col. Winslow as his private secretary, and it is probable that upon their recommendation and that of Surveyor General Charles Morris, the general locations were assigned to the loyal corps.
                  
8
Anna Catherine DOPP
Birth:
5 Mar 1734
Rheinbeck Flats, Dutchess, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   .
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Johannes Dopp - Marytjen Eckhardt

Johannes Dopp was christened at Medard, Rheinland, Germany 5 Jan 1695. His parents were Johan Peter Dopp and Anna Margaretha Bernhardt.

He married Marytjen Eckhardt 4 May 1717 at Kingston, Ulster, New York . Marytjen Eckhardt was born at of Hoog-dytsland, Germany Abt 1696 daughter of Johan Adam Eckhardt and Elizabeth Catharina Geib .

They were the parents of 8 children:
Johan Pieter Dopp born 15 Mar 1718.
Marthan Dopp born Abt 1720.
Johan Jury (Georg) Dopp born 4 Feb 1722.
Margaretha Dopp born Abt 1724.
Maria Dopp born Abt 1726.
Eva Dopp born Abt 1728.
David Dopp born 5 Apr 1730.
Anna Catherine Dopp born 5 Mar 1734.

Johannes Dopp died Feb 1734 at Rheinbeck, Dutchess, New York .

Marytjen Eckhardt died at of New York .