Cornelis Maessen van Buren

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Cornelis Maessen van Buren

Also Known As: "Cornelis Maessen /Van Buyrmalsen/", "Cornelis Maessen VANBUREN"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Buurmalsen, Geldermalsen, Gelderland, Netherlands
Death: April 08, 1648 (31-40)
Rensselaer, Rensselaer County, New York, United States
Place of Burial: Rensselaer, Rensselaer County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Bartolomeus Maes Maas van Buren and Magdelena van Buren
Husband of Catalyntje Martense van Buren
Father of Maas Cornelisseen Van Buren Bloemendal; Hendrick Cornelissen van Buren; Martien Van Buren; Christina Cornelisse ten Broeck and Tobias Cornelissen Van Buren
Brother of Hendrick Maessen van Buren

Occupation: Came from Holland in 1600
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Cornelis Maessen van Buren

Cornelis Maessen Van Buren was born in Burmalsen, Provence of Guelderland, Holland, in—say—1610, and died in Papsknee, New York, in 1648. His name was variously spelled Bruyen, Burjmalsen, Buurmalsen, or Burren. Catalyntje Martensen was born in Guelderland, Holland, and died in 1648. Both Cornelis and Catalyntje were buried on the same day on their farm. They were married in Holland in 1635-1636. She took the name Catalyntje Van Buren. They had five children:

i. Hendrick Cornelissen Van Buren: He was born at 2:00 a.m. on June 30, 1636, on board the ship Arms of Rensselaerwyck. He married Elizabeth Van Slyck.

ii. Marten Cornelissen Van Buren: He was born in about 1640 in Rensselaerwyck Colony, America, and died on November 13, 1703. He married Maritjie Quackenbosch in about 1662. They were the great-great grandparents of President Martin Van Buren:

Marten Cornelissen Van Buren, father of

Pieter Van Buren, father of

Marten Van Buren, father of

Abraham Van Buren (1737–1817), father of

(8th U.S. Pres.) Martin Van Buren (1782–1862).

iii. Maas Cornelissen Van Buren: He was born in about 1643 in Rensselaerwyck Colony, America, and died on November 27, 1704. He married Josine Janse Gardiner in 1682–3.

iv. Christÿna Van Buren [#961]: She was born in Albany, New York, on May 19, 1644, and died in New York on November 26, 1729.

v. Tobias Van Buren: He was born in about 1647. There are no records of him marrying or having children; therefore, he probably died before adulthood.

The book, Van Buren Family, is the basis for the following.

Cornelis came to America in 1631 on the ship Endracht (Unity) from the port of Texel. Cornelis was from the Province of Gelderland; specifically, a small place called Burmalsen near the town of Buren. Nothing is known of his parents altho it is likely that his father's name was Maes.

listing in passenger lists

https://www.olivetreegenealogy.com/ships/nnship03.shtml

In the translation of The Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts

May 27,1631, a number of persons, among whom was Cornelis Maesen van Buyrmalsen, signed an agreement for three years to Killian van Rensselaer estates for services thereon—to be paid 1st year £60, 2nd year £70, 3rd year £80, and in hand £12 in advance. He was listed among the passengers on ship d'Eendracht in July, 1631.

Entries for supplies furnished to Cornelis Maessen on August 16, 1634, show that he was still in the colony at that time. It appears that Cornelis returned to the Netherlands after his three years of indenture, married, conceived a child, and returned to Rensselaerwyck in 1636. A sworn affidavit by Jan Verbeeck and Cornelis Theuenissen Bos on August 12, 1662, (14 years after Cornelis and Catalyntje died) stated that both were buried on the same day, leaving their five children under the guardianship of Bos and Theunix Direxsz (Van Vechten) of the Colony. Bos further states that he came to this New Netherlands in 1636 in the ship Rensselaerwyck in the service of Cornelis Maessen and that he served him six years; also that Hendrick Cornelisz Maessen was born on the ship and that the other children were born in New Netherlands.

In a letter from Kiliaen van Rensselaer to Jacob Planck, his agent in the New Netherlands, he wrote:

These two farmers, who have been very helpful to me, viz., Cornelis Maessen and Symon Walrichs, you will give a fair choice of the men who are coming but in such a way that they do not select all the best men, for others must have something, too. You will provide them with as many animals as can be supplied from the increase of the others, and in case they should want to settle on Paepzickens land, which I think has not yet been bought, make every effort to purchase the same or at best to cause the farmers to be established there with the consent of the owners.

In a letter dated August 4, 1639, Kiliaen van Rensselaer refers to the house of Cornelis Maessen which was being built. In a letter of June 16, 1640, van Rensselaer authorizes the securing of assistance of various persons among whom he mentions Cornelis Maessen van Buyrmalsen, to provide other farmers for the farms on which the farmers refuse to accept the terms of his previous agent, and to control all by the rules and ordinances and to obey him (van Rensselaer) as Lord and Master, which obligations began with the arrival of Cornelis Maessen and Symon Walricks, agreeable to their contracts of August 15, 1636, in Amsterdam.

It is clear that Cornelis Maessen was not merely an ignorant peasant, but a small farmer of intelligence, integrity, and determination, and that his efforts had been well recognized by the Patroon (Kiliaen van Rensselaer). The Patroon required a tenth of the produce of each farm. In 1644 Cornelis paid him 100 bushels of wheat, oats, and rye, besides a few peas, showing that he had harvested about 1,000 bushels of grain.

On October 24, 1646, Cornelis purchased a piece of property described as: "A house and plantation at the North River on the Island of Manhattan, next to Wouter van Twiller and Thomas Hall." It was located between the present Christopher and 14th Streets with boundaries near to those streets and doubtless having North River frontage.



Cornelius Maas Van Buren was born in Burrmalsen, Guilrland, Holland

in 1610. He married Catalyntje Martense in Holland in 1635. They arrived

aboard the ship "Rensselaerwyck" from Geldrland, Holland in 1631 and

were among the earliest settlers of Beverwyck (now Albany) New York.

Cornelius and Catalyntje died in 1648 and were buried on the same day.


GEDCOM Note

Bio notes: m. Catalyntje Martense Van Alstyne 1635 in Gelderland, Holland


GEDCOM Note

Cornelis Maesen sailed for New Netherland as a farm laborer in 1631, having benn 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 was discharged in the colony with f12:18 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.

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Cornelis Maessen van Buren's Timeline

1612
1612
Buurmalsen, Geldermalsen, Gelderland, Netherlands
1631
July 1631
Age 19
On passenger list of ship D'Eendracht
1631
Age 19
1631
Age 19
to New Amsterdam
1631
Age 19
To America, Ship Endracht (Unity) from the Province of Gelderland
1631
Age 19
From Burmalsen, Province of Gelderland, neat Buren near Rhine river
1634
1634
Age 22
Returned to Holland and married there
1635
1635
Age 23
Returned to Holland and married there
1636
1636
- 1637
Age 24
To America, Ship Arms of Rensselaerwyck (2nd)