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About Daniel d'Estrang, Jr.
(# 4 in The Strang Genealogy) page 28
Accomplishment: 1744, he had acquired 3 properties - the Manor of Cortlandt; Huff farm with sawmill; one on the ridge.
Difference: it is also reported that Daniel was born in England, GB but in his mother's will there is mentioned a Daniel her youngest son?
Inherited: Aft. 1707, the farm at White Plains where his father had tried the grazing business.
Residence: Cortlandt, NY, USA.
Birth: Sep. 5, 1691 New Rochelle Westchester County New York, USA Death: 1741 Cortlandt Manor Westchester County New York, USA
son of Daniel; husband of Phebe Purdy Streing
Birth: Sep. 5, 1692 New Rochelle Westchester County New York, USA Death: 1741 Cortlandt Manor Westchester County New York, USA [Edit Dates]
The Strang Genealogy by Josephine C. Frost, Brooklyn, NY, 1915, pp 28-29:
4 DANIEL STRANG, son of Daniel (1) and Charlotte (LeMestre) Strang; born 1692; for in the census of New Rochelle in 1698 it is stated he was six years of age; died 1741; married Phebe, daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Purdy of Rye Neck. She died 1761. Letters of Administration were granted on estate of Daniel to his son Daniel, May 8, 1741. Daniel removed fronl Rye to White Plains, upon a farm acquired by his father as one of the Patentees. About 1740 he settled in the Manor of Courtlandt where he procured three farms. The Haft farm he occupied himself; settled his son Daniel on the Saw Mill farm. The third farm was on a ridge north of the town and was once possessed by Benjamin Field. Upon this he settled his son Francis. He also procured a farm on Stoney St. where Caleb Morgan later lived and which tradition says he intended for his son Gabriel but it was never occupied by him.
Issue: +14 Daniel Strang. +15 Joseph Strang. +16 Francis Strang. +17 Gabriel Strang. 18 John Strang; died in college in New Jersey, about 1749, while studying for the ministry. +19 Henry Strang. +20 Phebe Strang. 21 Elizabeth Strang, born June 7, 173'3, died Jan. 30, 1773; buried Presbyterian Church-yard, Yorktown, New York; married Joseph, born April 18, 1733, died Dec. 1, 1757; son of Rev. Samuel Sackett, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Yorktown, N. Y. Issue: One son, who died without issue.
- Strang Burial Ground marker (Photo) states that Daniel is buried here. (click on Strang Cemetery, below) (bio by: dscott)
Family links:
Parents:
Daniel Streing (1656 - 1707)
Charlotte LeMestre Streing (1663 - 1722)
Spouse:
Phebe Purdy Streing (1703 - 1761)*
Children:
Daniel Strang (1715 - 1792)*
Francis Strang (1727 - 1815)*
Siblings:
Clorinda Penelope Strang Purdy (1687 - 1726)*
Daniel Strang (1691 - 1741)
Mary Prudence Strang Budd (1697 - 1745)*
- Calculated relationship
Burial: Strang Cemetery Greenwich Fairfield County Connecticut, USA
In the early 1700s, Daniel Strang, the son of a Huguenot who was naturalized in England also named Daniel Strang, settled in Yorktown after leaving his father’s property in New Rochelle. It was around 1728 that he settled with his wife Phoebe Purdy and their eight children at this homestead, less than a mile away from the First Presbyterian Church which served as the center point for the township of Crompond Corners. While not much is known about the Strang family’s involvement with the town at this point, it is assumed that the family’s loyalties were divided at the time the Revolutionary War broke out.
One of Daniel and Phoebe’s sons, Daniel Strang III, was arrested in Peekskill in 1776, on suspicion of being a spy for the British. He was apprehended while lurking around the army units stationed at the Peekskill Academy. When he was searched by Continental forces, they found several documents from British Colonel Robert Rogers who was commander of the Queen’s Rangers, the unit that would later become Simcoe’s Rangers. The documents, dated December 30, 1776, authorized Strang and others to recruit disaffected soldiers to the Rangers and detailed the terms and rewards that would be offered for recruitment. According to reports, Strang made no attempt to defend himself and on the authority of General Washington, he was tried and sentenced to death as a spy. He was hung on Oak Hill on the grounds of the Peekskill Academy on January 27, 1777 as the first spy to be tried and executed under the First Espionage Act passed by the Contented Congress in August of 1776. It is uncertain what happened to the Daniel Strang Homestead after the war, however rumors circulate about a stone outcropping under the house being used as a hiding place for loyalists and British sympathizers.
In 1812, Abraham Requa Strang was born in the home. A direct descendant of Daniel Strang the spy, he owned the home for many years until he moved to a home on Crompond Road. Ever the public servant, Abraham Requa Strang served on the town’s Board of Supervisors in 1852-53 as well as a member of the assembly of the First District of Westchester County in 1856. Additionally, he served as the County Superintendent for the Poor for over a decade in 1860-1872. Afterwards it was reported that the property was owned by James Knapp and family in the 1880s.
The homestead hasn’t changed much on the outside since the days of Daniel Strang. There is a newer addition on the north side of the house, but the rest has been maintained to look as it did in the 18th century. The barn behind the home and the old well on the property were all parts of the original construction. The inside of the home has also been restored to reflect the colonial era as faithfully as possible while still allowing for modern upgrades and newer technologies. A giant brass key hung near the front door is said to be the key to the original 18th century doors.
Daniel d'Estrang, Jr.'s Timeline
1691 |
September 5, 1691
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New Rochelle, Westchester County, NY
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1714 |
1714
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Greenwich, Fairfield, CT
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1724 |
February 25, 1724
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White Plains, Westchester County, New York
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1726 |
1726
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White Plains, Westchester County, New York
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1729 |
June 14, 1729
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White Plains, Westchester County, New York
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1730 |
1730
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White Plains, Westchester County, New York
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1731 |
February 2, 1731
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White Plains, Westchester County, Province of New York
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1733 |
June 7, 1733
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White Plains, Westchester County, Province of New York
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1739 |
1739
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Cortlandt Manor, Westchester County, New York, United States
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