Jacobus "Barent" Resolvedse Waldrun

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Jacobus "Barent" Resolvedse Waldrun (Waldren)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Manhattan, New York, New York County, New York, United States
Death: circa August 06, 1740 (80-88)
Manhattan, New York, New York County, New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Resolved Waldron; Resolved Waldron; Tanneke Barentse Waldron and Tanneke Nagel
Husband of Jannetie Meynderts and Jannetie Jans Waldron
Father of Belitie (Waldron) Delamater; Catherine Waldron; Johannes Barentsze Waldron; Johannes Waldron; Tanneke Waldron and 9 others
Brother of Annetje Delamater; Ruth Resolveert Delamater; Cornelia Waldron; Johannes Waldron, III and Samuel Waldron
Half brother of William Resolveert Resolved Van Waldron; Rebecca Nagel; Aeltje Van Amsterdam Vermilye and (?) Joseph Waldron

Managed by: Private User
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About Jacobus "Barent" Resolvedse Waldrun

  • Revised history of Harlem (city of New York). Its origin and early annals, prefaced by home scenes in the fatherlands; or, notices of its founders before emigration. Also, sketches of numerous families and the recovered history of the land-titles .. (1904)
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/details/revisedhistoryof01rike
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/94/m...
  • Pg. 94
  • Joseph and Resolved Waldron, sons of Resolved Waldron, of Amsterdam, were book printers. The family was English; the name, of repute in England from the time of the Conqueror, had spread through nearly all its southern tier of counties. But born and raised at Amsterdam, these brothers had acquired all the characteristics of Hollanders, having also married Dutch wives, the sisters Aeltie and Rebecca Hendricks, whose father, Hendrick Koch, was a respectable Amsterdam burgher. It is stated on pretty good authority that Resolved had made the voyage to Brazil, but of this we will not speak further here. Having the misfortune to lose his wife, he married again, on May 10th, 1654, a lady of thirty years, living near the West India House, Tanneke Nagel, daughter of Barent Nagel, deceased, oi Groningen. Resolved was living at this time in the Teerketels-steeg, a short street just north of, the Dam; but the same year sailed with his family for America. His brother, Joseph Waldron, had preceded him to this country by two years, according to his son's reckoning. He also was accompanied by a second wife, Annetie Daniels, but twenty-five when he married her, at Amsterdam, April 4, 1649, she and Resolved's wife being of the same age.
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/691/...
  • Pg. 691
  • Resolved Waldron, born May 10, 1610, the most noted, as he was one of the most intelligent, of the Harlem settlers, needed not the titular dignity of baron, which some of poetic humor claim for him; yet might he well have graced the title. As we have seen, he had been in the printing business at Amsterdam, and
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/692/...
  • Pg. 692
  • emigrated with his family to Nw Netherland late in 1654. Received with his brother, Joseph, and their wives, to the fellowship of the church at New Amsterdam, the first care was to secure a home, ....
  • Joseph Waldron, "living near the hoeck of Passenger Street," in Amsterdam, and on the eve of his second marriage, appeared before the orphan master, May 12, 1649, according to custom, and gave bonds for the maintenance of his two children by his late wife, Aeltie Hendricks; as "the children by the former marriage had no property." One of these perhaps was left at Amsterdam with its grandmother, 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 mother. The last time noticed was on August 30, 1661, being two months' wages, 48 florins. He was butler to the garrison, and had charge of the magazine of the company. Waldron died in 1663. Just before his end, sending for a notary to draw up his will, he said "there would be nothing left, of his widow, who intended to leave for the Fatherland." Upon these representations and it appearing that there were "six minor children, two of whom are of a former marriage." the orphan's court of New Amsterdame, December 10, 1663, at the desire of the widow Annetie Daniels, appointed Resolved Waldron, "her husband's brother," and Hendrick Jensen Vander Vin, "who is her oldest and most intimate friend," as gardians of her surviving children. It is uncertain whether she visited Holland, as she was married 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 died in infancy, and John, when not quite 8 years old was accidentally killed in his step-father's mill, January 23, 1669. Sarah, born about 1646, at Amsterdam, married, in 1662, Jan Gerritsen Van Voorst, and in 1666 Laurens Jansen Colevelt, by whom she had children whose descendants are yet found. Mary, born 1652, married Hendrick Gerritsen Blauvelt (see page 363), and Anna, born 1657, married John Delamontagne. To her son Daniel and son-in-law Delamontagne, Annetie Daniels, then for the third time a widow, conveyed some city property, May 10, 1688. She was afterward allowed pay by government "for tending sick soldiers." Daniel Waldron, born 1650, at Amsterdam, married, in 1673, Sarah Rutgers, daughter of Rutger Willemsen. ....
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/694/...
  • Pg. 694
  • Resolved Waldron (1), born May 10, 1610, married first, Rebecca Hendricks, before 1647, had three children. He married second, Tanneke Nagel, May 10, 1654, had five children, and died in 1690. He had issue by first wife :
    • 2. William, born at Amsterdam, Holland, February 10, 1647, married Engeltie Stoutenburg, February 10, 1671, had seven children.
    • 3. Rebecca, born at Amsterdam, in 1649, married first, John Nagel, August 27, 1670, had ten children, and second, John Dyckman, May 15, 1690, had two children.
    • 4. Aeltie. born at Amsterdam, in 1651, married Captain Johannes Vermilye, August 27, 1670, had ten children.
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/695/...
  • RESOLVED (1) HAD ISSUE BY SECOND WIFE:
    • 5. Barent, born at New Amsterdam, in 1655, married Jannetie Meynderts, September 25, 1687, had six children.
    • 6. Ruth, baptized May 10, 1657, married first, John Delamater, August 11, 1678, had nine children. She married second, Hendrick Bogert, September 15, 1703.
    • 7. Cornelia, baptized February 30, 1659, married Peter Van Oblienis, June 8, 1685.
    • 8. Johannes, born at Harlem, September 12, 1665, married Anna Van Dalsen, April 25, 1690. had seven children, and died m 1753.
    • 9. Samuel, born at Harlem, April 10, 1670, married Neeltie Bloodgood, March 5, 1692, had ten children, and died in 1737.
  • William Waldron (2), (son of Resolved), .... etc.
  • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/696/...
  • Barent Waldron (5), (son of Resolved), whose possession of Gloudie's Point gave him a place among the patentees, married September 25, 1687, Jannetie, daughter of John Meynderts. (See page 212.) Having much of his father's aptness for public business, he served the town in various trusts, especially in that of collector. His name as assessor stands in Montgomery's charter, 1731, and he signs the Mill Camp grant in 1738. .At this date Jochem and Jacob Gardenier appear to occupy his farm. Being aged, he sold his farm, August 6, 1740, to John R. Myer, of New York. (See page 602.)
  • BARENT (5) HAD ISSUE:
    • 17. Tanneke, born November 3, 1688, married John Adriaens (Ariaense), March 25, 1720, had four children.
    • 18. Belitie, baptized April 6, 1690, married Isaac Delamater, Jr., August 9, 1717, had four children.
    • 19. Johannes, baptized August 7, 1692, married first, Susannah, daughter of Isaac Delamater, June 5, 1719, had seven children. He married second, Margaret Roll, April 13, 1729, had five children. Later removed to Philipsburgh, Westchester County, N. Y., both living to an advanced age.*
    • * .... etc.
    • http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/697/...
    • 20. Resolved, baptized September 1, 1695.
    • 21. Catherine, baptized May 25, 1698, married John Foshay, May 18, 1728, had one child.
    • 22. Margaret, born 1700, married Cornelius Lydecker, June 24, 1721.
  • Johannes Waldron (8), (son of Resolved), .... etc. ___________________
  • Resolved Waldron's descendants : Vanderpoel branch ; descendants in the Vanderpoel branch of Resolved Waldron, who came from Holland to New Amsterdam in 1650 (1910)
  • http://archive.org/details/resolvedwaldrons00slip
  • https://archive.org/stream/resolvedwaldrons00slip#page/n88/mode/1up
  • Pg.39
  • .... etc.
  • We find that Johannes Waldron was born at Haarlem in 1579. His parents were people of means and position, but had suffered loss owing to the disastrous siege of Haarlem and its capture by the Spanish in 1573.
  • https://archive.org/stream/resolvedwaldrons00slip#page/n90/mode/1up
  • Pg.40
  • The grandchildren of Johannes Waldron are given in genealogical table on another page.
  • Resolvert Waldron was born in 1616 during the truce between Spain and Holland, and the child was named Resolved, or Resolvert, as an indication of the steadfastness of the parental devotion to the cause of liberty and religion.
  • In 1650 Resolvert emigrated to America, sailing on the ship Princess, from the Texel for New Amsterdam. His history and his prominence in the Colony are fully brought out in the historical extracts found in the Waldron Ancestry, and also in Riker's History of Harlem.
  • Resolvert Waldron married in Amsterdam Rebecca Koch, daughter of Hendricks Koch. After her death, which occurred soon after reaching America, he married Tanneke Nagel. He received a patent or grant of land on the east end of Manhattan Island, called New Harlem, and here his grandson Johannes built a mansion with bricks imported from Holland, and named it Waldron Hall, Horne Hook. (See Illustration.)
  • Resolvert died in 1690, and devised his large estate to his fourth son, Samuel.
  • Extract from the New Harlem Register. .... etc.
  • https://archive.org/stream/resolvedwaldrons00slip#page/n102/mode/1up
  • Pg.46
  • Resolveert or Resolved Waldron, born May 10, 1616; married, first, Rebecca Hendricks, before 1647, had three children. He married, second, Tanneke Nagel, May 10th, 1654, had five children, and died in 1690. He had issue by first wife:
    • 1. William, born at Amsterdam, Holland, February 10, 1647, married Engeltie Stoutenberg, February 10, 1671; had seven children.
    • 2. Rebecca, born at Amsterdam, in 1649, married, first, John Nagel, August 27, 1670, had ten children; and, second, John Dyckman, May 15, 1690, had two children.
    • 3. Aeltie, born at Amsterdam, in 1651 ; married Captain Johannes Vermilye, August 27th, 1670; had ten children.
  • Issue by Second Wife.
    • 4. Barent, born at New Amsterdam, in 1655, married Jannetie Meynderts, September 25, 1687; had six children.
    • 5. Ruth, baptized May 10, 1657, married, first, John Delamater, August 11, 1678; had nine children. She married, second, Hendrick Bogert, September 15, 1703.
    • 6. Cornelia, baptized February, 1659, married Peter Van Oblienis, June 8, 1685.
    • 7. Johannes, born at Harlem, September 12, 1665, married Anna Von Dolsen, April 25, 1690; had seven children, and died in 1753.
    • https://archive.org/stream/resolvedwaldrons00slip#page/n104/mode/1up
    • Pg.47
    • 8. Samuel, born at Harlem, April 10, 1670, married Neeltie Bloodgood, March 5, 1692; had ten children, and died in 1737.
  • Samuel Waldron (son of Resolved), purchased the paternal farm upon Van Keulen's Hook, November 25, 1690. He married Neeltie, daughter of Francis Bloodgood, of Flushing, March 5, 1692. .... etc.
  • Waldron died in 1737, his lands, now rated 156 acres, passing to his son Johannes, and from him in 1741, to his brother William, who the year following conveyed part of the farm (17 acres, say the Hopper Place) to his brother Benjamin, and the lot on Montanye's Flat, with lot No. 12, Fourth Division, and four acres of the ten-acre lot aforesaid to his brother Peter. _________________
  • Genealogy of Frederick H. Waldron from the time of the settlement of New Amsterdam (New York) through the Waldrons, Whitneys and Riggses
  • https://archive.org/details/genealogyoffrede00newh
  • https://archive.org/stream/genealogyoffrede00newh#page/n18/mode/1up
  • Pg.11
  • .... The first of whom we have record is Baron Resolved Waldron, son of Count Johannas VonWaldron, who was born in 1610, in Amsterdam, Holland. He was well educated in Latin, French and English. He was an extensive traveler in Europe and South America, spent some time in Brazil and returning to his native land, Holland, in 1645, married Rebecca Hendryx in 1647. She died 165-. He afterward became acquainted with Lady Tanneka Neigle, daughter of Baron Von Neigle, and was married to her May 10, 1654. Resolved Waldron joined the staff of Governor Peter Stuyvesant in May, 1647, and continued to serve the Dutch government during Stuyvesant's administration until James, Duke of York, sent four ships of war during time of peace in 1664 and robbed the Dutch of all their possessions in America.
  • Resolved Waldron acted as ambassador to all the petty English courts in New England, Virginia and Baltimore. He with two others obtained the first grant from Stuyvesant for New Harlem in 1654, of that portion of Manhattan Island lying between 82d and 109th Streets, extending from North River to East River. He established the first ferry and erected the first Dutch church in that town. He also built himself a stone mansion on East River (called by the Dutch "Helengate," or "roaring water"). The Indian name was "Sevandican," or "mad water." The Indian name for the land or bowery was "Rachewanas," or "crooked land." This bowery or plantation was about a mile along the water. Here Waldron lived a number of years until his sons grew up and married and then, while chief magistrate, he removed to Kingsbridge.
  • https://archive.org/stream/genealogyoffrede00newh#page/n19/mode/1up
  • Pg.12
  • The old Waldron stone mansion at Horn Hook (88th Street, north side, a little east of Avenue A) was erected in 1660 and was kept in good repair until 1870, when it was destroyed by fire — 210 years old.
  • Resolved Waldron departed this life about 1706, about ninety- six years of age, and was buried in "God's acre" beside the little church on the banks of the Harlem River.
  • From the "History of Harlem" by Riker we extract the following, .... etc.
  • https://archive.org/stream/genealogyoffrede00newh#page/n20/mode/1up
  • Pg.13
  • .... He died in 1690, his inventory taken that year (May 17) embracing "lands, slaves, farm stock, etc., three lots of land lying upon VanKenlen's Hook, with one lot of land lying upon Jochem Pietus and a house with its lot comprising buildings and plantation as it is situated and lying at this village, as also a piece of meadow lying in Round meadow." He left issue as follows : by Rebecca —
    • *WILLIAM, born 1647 ; married Engeltie Stoutenburg.
    • REBECCA, born 1649; married John Nagle.
    • AELTIE, born 1651 ; married Captain Johannas Vermilye.
  • Issue by Tanneka :
    • BARNET, born 1655.
    • RUTH, born 1657 ; married John Dalamater.
    • CORNELIA, born 1659; married Peter Von Obliens.
    • JOHANNAS, born 1665.
    • SAMUEL, born 1670.
  • *WILLIAM WALDRON, the eldest son of the Baron, .... etc. ____________________

GEDCOM Source

@R1200958936@ Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,9289::0 1,9289::33144089

GEDCOM Source

@R1200958936@ Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015 Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 1,9289::0 1,9289::33144089

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Jacobus "Barent" Resolvedse Waldrun's Timeline

1655
December 4, 1655
Manhattan, New York, New York County, New York, United States
1688
October 29, 1688
Harlem, New Amsterdam, New York, United States
November 3, 1688
Harlem, New Amsterdam, New York, United States,
1690
April 6, 1690
Harlem, New York, NY.
1690
New York, United States
1692
August 7, 1692
Manhattan, New York, New York County, New York
August 7, 1692
Manhattan, Kings, New York, United States,
August 7, 1692
Harlem, New York, United States