

French by ancestry, Dutch by birth, and English by association, Philippe de Lannoy earned for himself the respect of his English neighbors and the pride of his American descendants.
Philippe de Lanoy, later Philip Delano, was baptized in the Protestant Walloon church of Leiden, Holland on November 6, 1603. The Walloons were the French-speaking natives of the ancient region of Wallonia, now in today's Belgium,[7] but his parents were Romance Flemish people. His parents, Jan (Jean) de Lanoy of Tourcoing and Marie Mahieu of Lille (Rijsel) in Flanders, at that time in the Spanish Netherlands,[7] were betrothed on January 13, 1596 in the same church. Both parents made their way with their families to Leiden via Canterbury, England, having fled religious persecution from Flanders around 1579.[7] Jean's father was Gysbert (Guilbert) de Lanoy
Philippe de Lannoy (1602-1681), who was also known as Philippe de La Noye and whose family name was anglicized to Delano, was born in Leiden on December 7, 1602 of religious refugee parents Jan/Jean de Lano/de Lannoy (ca. 1570 Tourcoing, France-1604) and Mary/Marie Mahieu (ca. 1580 Lille, France-1650). François Coek (Pilgrim Francis Cooke) appeared as a baptismal witness for him on 6 November or 6 December 1603 (New Style) at the Waloon Church, Leiden, Holland.
It is said that Philip was a passenger on the Speedwell which turned back and then came on the Fortune the second Pilgrim ship, which arrived in Massachusetts on November 9, 1621 ("Great Migration Begins", by Anderson).
Philip died between 22 August 1681 (date of memorandum serving as will) and 4 March 1681/2 (date of inventory). His burial site is not known.
Philip Delano married:
It is not clear how many children Philip Delano had, their birth years or which of his two wives bore them.The following is the current estimation. (Update on 2 October 2022)
Children attributed to Hester Dewsberry and Philip Delano:
Children attributed to Mary Pontus and Philip Delano:
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/9MRT-DRX/phillip-delano-1602-...
PARENTS AND SIBLINGS 
Jean de Lanoy 1570-1603 Marriage: 13 January 1596 Leiden, Holland, Netherlands 
Marie le Mahieu 1580-1650
Children (10) 
Marguerite de Lannoy 1597-1681 
Antoinette de Lannoy 1598- 
Esaie de Lannoy 1599-1660 
Jacques de Lannoy 1599-1660 
Jeanne deLannoy 1601-1681 
Jeanne de Lannoy 1601-1652 
Thomas de Lannoy 1602-1681 
Phillip Delano 1602-1681 
Henry de Lannoy 1603-1670 
Michelle de Lannoy 1798-1620
Documents
T.N. Schelhaas letter
Histories
Notes from: Philipe Delano of the Fortune by Muriel Curtis Cushing:
FIRST GENERATION
1 PHILIPPE1 DELANO, b. Leiden, Holland 1602; bp. in the Walloon Church of Leiden 6 Nov. 1603 [1]; son of Jan and Marie (Mahieu) de Lannoy; d. bet. 22 Aug. 1681 (memorandum serving as his will) and 4 March 1681/2 (inventory); ae 79 yrs, leaving a personal estate of fifty pounds and thirteen shillings. [2]
He m. (1) Plymouth 19 Dec. 1634 HESTER DEW(E)SBURY [3], parents and birth unknown; d. prob. Duxbury bef. 1653 when a deed was signed by second wife Mary. [4]
He m. (2) bet. 4 March 1652 (called widow in father's estate inventory) and 17 Jan. 1653/4 (deed) MARY (PONTUS) GLASS [4]; b. ca. 1625 if ae 20 when she first married [5]; d. after 5 July 1682 as she is mentioned in the settlement of Philip's estate [2]; dau. of William and Wybra (Hanson) Pontus and widow of James Glass. James and Mary (Pontus) Glass had 4 daus: Hannah Glass, b.1647, d. young; Wybra Glass, b. 1649 m.Joseph Bumpus; Hannah Glass, b. 1651 m. Isaac Billington; and Mary Glass, b. 1652 m. Samuel Hunt. [6]
On 1 March 1676/7 Philip Delano Sr., "aged 74 yrs, or there about" and Mary his wife, took oath that bef. "he married Mary Glass ye relict of James Glass deceased that she ye sd Mary gave all her lands unto her three children Mary, Wybery, and Hannah equally alike." [7]
Philip Delano served on the Plymouth Grand and Petit juries, on the committee to view "the hay grounds," as a surveyor, and volunteered to serve in the Pequot War. In 1633 "Phillip Delanoy" was in the first list of Plymouth Colony Freemen. [8]
In 1623 Philip Delano was granted an acre of land in Plymouth as "passenger on the Fortune" [9]; the sale of this acre to Stephen Deane in 1627 was the first recorded land sale in the colony. [10]
On 2 Oct. 1637 Philip Delano was granted forty acres, bounded by land of Mr. John Alden lying on the south side, the sea on the east side, and the lands of Edward Bumpasse on the west side. [11]
Philip Delano is on the list of names of Purchasers of Dartmouth who on 7 March 1652 met at Plymouth to make allotment of their shares which had been purchased from the Indians [12] and in 1662 Philip is on the list as being one of "the first borne children of this government" to receive land in Middleborough. [13]
There is no probate record for Philip Delano. An inventory taken and exhibited to the Court on 4 March 1681/2
With first wife
With second wife
Notes
The progenitor of the Delano family in the Americas was Philippe de Lannoy [1] whose family name was anglicized to Delano. The 19-year-old Pilgrim of Flemish descent arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts on November 9, 1621 on the second Pilgrim ship, Fortune. His descendants include Philip Delano Jr., Frederic Adrian Delano, Jonathan Delano and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Ulysses S. Grant, Calvin Coolidge, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Robert Redfield, Captain Paul Delano, and Alan B. Shepard. Delano family forebears include the Pilgrim who chartered the Mayflower, seven of its passengers and three signers of the Mayflower Compact.
Philippe Delano (De Lannoy)
Philippe de Lannoy was born in Leiden on December 7, 1602 of religious refugee parents Jan Lano, born Jean de Lannoy in 1575 at Tourcoing, and Marie le Mahieu of Lille both in the northern France. His parents were betrothed in the Leiden Walloon Church on January 13, 1596. After his father died in 1604 at Leiden, his mother married Robert Mannoo of Namur on February 18, 1605. Philippe's grandfather, Guilbert de Lannoy of Tourcoing, was an early Protestant who left the mainland with his family for England probably in the late 1570s and then, in 1591, moved to Leiden, a safe harbor for religious dissidents. The le Mahieus arrived in Leiden from England around the same time. The family name de Lannoy probably derives from the town of Lannoy (a name derived from the Latin alnetum and French “l’aunaie” meaning “alder plantation”), near Lille. There is no evidence to support claims that Philippe's father descended from the noble de Lannoys.
Journey to America
Philippe de Lannoy's family was affiliated to the Leiden Walloon Church, indicating they were Francophones or speakers of a French dialect. While the timing and extent of his contact with the John Robinson Pilgrim congregation in Leiden is unknown, Philippe eventually joined their voyage to the American continent.
The Leiden Pilgrims bought the Speedwell. Although his name is not on the passenger list, Philippe is believed by a contemporary scholar to have joined his uncle Francis Cooke (husband of his mother's sister, Hester le Mahieu) and young cousin John Cooke on the first stage of the voyage from Delfshaven to Southampton to meet the Mayflower. They gathered in England with other Pilgrims and hireling colonizers to stage the onward voyage with the two ships. Barely into the Atlantic crossing, the Speedwell began to leak. This leakage forced the convoy to abort the voyage and return to England twice. After the second return, Mayflower proceeded alone. Speedwell was sold. Ten of its passengers, among them Francis and John Cooke, joined the Mayflower. The remaining Speedwell passengers remained behind. Philippe joined a replacement ship, the "Fortune", which sailed for Plymouth Colony in early July 1621, arriving on November 9. It is possible that Philippe went separately to England rather than on Speedwell.
Life in America
Philippe de Lannoy joined and resided with his uncle Francis Cooke and cousin Robert who had arrived on the Mayflower the year before. In 1623, he received a land grant in Plymouth but sold this property in 1627 and moved to Duxborough where in 1634 he married Hester Dewsbury (1613–1657). There, Delano prospered and was part of the group who organized the construction of highways and bridges around the village.
He served in the Pequot War of 1637 as a volunteer. In 1652 he joined with 35 other colonists to purchase with trading goods what was then called Dartmouth Township from Massasoit, the leader of the Wampanoag who drew the boundaries. It was sold to the Religious Society of Friends or Quakers, who wished to live outside the stringent religious laws of the Puritans. Philippe gave his portion of the acquisition, amounting to 800 acres (3.2 km²), to his son Jonathan Delano.[3] Following the death of his wife, he married a second time to Mary Pontus. He died on August 22, 1681 in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. A great many of his offspring would become prominent mariners, whalers, and shipbuilders. The later commercial success of some Delanos was such that they would become part of the Massachusetts aristocracy, sometimes referred to as one of the Boston Brahmins (the "First Families of Boston").
Descendants
His son Jonathan married Mercy Warren, granddaughter of Mayflower passenger Richard Warren; among their direct descendants are the author Laura Ingalls Wilder, President Ulysses S. Grant, President Calvin Coolidge anthropologist Robert Redfield, astronaut Alan B. Shepard, and the poet Conrad Potter Aiken.
Over time, family members migrated to other states including Michigan, Maine, New York, Ohio, Virginia, Vermont and as far away as Chile where today descendants of Captain Paul Delano are numerous and prominent. From the New York clan, Sara Delano married James Roosevelt and their only child, Franklin Delano Roosevelt became President of the United States.
The Delano name is also found across America where several places have been named in honor of a family member:
Some notable members of the Delano family in America:
http://www.citereh.com/p33.htm#i1304
Philip came over on the ship "The Fortune" in 1621.
Walloon is a religious church group.
A good description of Walloon is found in the excellent foreward by Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs in the Francis Cooke genealogy. (MF 12:v) "French—speaking Protestants of Belgium who lived in the southern provinces collectivley known as Wallonia, the land of the Walloons."
In 1578 the Walloon border areas were captured by the Catholic army and by 1585 thousands of Huguenots had fled to England or north to Zeeland and Holland. Here the Flemish and Walloon immigrants provided poorly paid industrial labor, revolutionizing the weaving industry in Holland by introducing new skills which had been developed in the southern towns, such as Lille (Lille, formerly a part of Walloon Flanders, now lies in northern France.) Among the refugees were Jan de Lannoy from Tourcoing (another translation of the same material calls him of Lille) and Marie Mahieu from Lille.
On 13 Jan. 1596 Peter du Bu and Gysbert Lano, the groom's father, were witnesses at the betrothal of Jan de Lano and Mary Mahieu. Only two children are recorded to this couple as the baptismal registers of the Walloon Church begin in the year l599 and there may have been older siblings of Jenne, bpt. 6 Nov. 1601 and Philippe, bpt. 6 Nov. 1603.
Jan Lano/Jean de Lannoy d. bet. Nov. 1603 and Feb. 1605, for his widow remarried on 6 March 1605 with the woolcomber Robert Mannoo, widower of Simone Pachette.
Francois Coek (Francis Cook) appeared as a baptismal witness for Philippe, son of Jan de Lannoy and Marie Mahieu. On 8 Feb. 1609 Jan Carwer (John Carver) and his first wife Marie de Lannoy were admitted to the Walloon Church. It is suggested that Philip Delano very likely was the nephew, not only of Francis Cooke, but probably of John Carver who became the first governor of Plymouth Colony.' "It is possible to see a strong Walloon connection in the Pilgrim congregation."
Philip m. (1) Plymouth 19 Dec. 1634 Hester Dew(e)sbury, parents and birth unknown; d. prob. Duxbury bef. 1653 when a deed was signed by second wife Mary.
Philip m. (2) bet. 4 March 1652 (called widow in father's estate inventory) and 17 Jan. 1653/4 (deed) Mary (Pontus) Glass ; b. ca. 1625 if ae 20 when she first married ; d. after 5 July 1682 as she is mentioned in the settlement of Philip's estate ; dau. of William and Wybra (Hanson) Pontus and widow of James Glass. James and Mary (Pontus) Glass had 4 daus: Hannah Glass, b.1647, d. young; Wybra Glass, b. 1649 m. Joseph Bumpus; Hannah Glass, b. 1651 m. Isaac Billington; and Mary Glass, b. 1652 m. Samuel Hunt.
On 1 March 1676/7 Philip Delano Sr., "aged 74 yrs, or there about" and Mary his wife, took oath that bef. "he married Mary Glass ye relict of James Glass deceased that she ye sd Mary gave all her lands unto her three children Mary, Wybery, and Hannah equally alike."
Philip Delano served on the Plymouth Grand and Petit juries, on the committee to view "the hay grounds," as a surveyor, and volunteered to serve in the Pequot War. In 1633 "Phillip Delanoy" was in the first list of Plymouth Colony Freemen.
In 1623 Philip Delano was granted an acre of land in Plymouth as "passenger on the Fortune" ; the sale of this acre to Stephen Deane in 1627 was the first recorded land sale in the colony.
On 2 Oct. 1637 Philip Delano was granted forty acres, bounded by land of Mr. John Alden lying on the south side, the sea on the east side, and the lands of Edward Bumpasse on the west side.
Philip Delano is on the list of names of Purchasers of Dartmouth who on 7 March 1652 met at Plymouth to make allotment of their shares which had been purchased from the Indians and in 1662 Philip is on the list as being one of "the first borne children of this government" to receive land in Middleborough.
There is no probate record for Philip Delano. An inventory taken and exhibited to the Court on 4 March 1681/2 on the "oath of his son Samuel" mentions only the personal estate with no real estate involved. On 5 July 1682 Thomas and Samuel (only son of the second wife) Delano agreed to follow what they knew to be the intent of their father "do mutually agree to pursue the Reall Will of the Deceased according to a Memorandum." A comparison was made bet. 2 memoranda, - - one dated 22 Aug. 1681 and the other "now drawn." Administration on the estate of "Phillip Delano of Duxborrow" was granted on 7 July 1682 to Samuel Delano.
Only six of Philip's children are named in the memorandum: Philip, Thomas, John, Samuel, Jane, and Rebecca. His wife (not named) was to have a cow and the free use of 1/3 of the orchard and land, both upland and meadow, during her life. Five shillings apiece were bequeathed to his seven eldest children; "two (viz) - Phillip and Thomas - have received theire proportions." All the moveables at his wife's death were to be disposed of amongst his four youngest children.
When the Separatists (later called Pilgrims) left England in about 1608 (because of religious persecution) they went to Holland. They were befriended by Marie de la Noye, a widow, and lived on her estate. Later when they returned to England and came to America on the Mayflower, her son, Phillipe, who had grown up with the English children left home and came to America in 1621 on the ship Fortune.
1603 |
November 6, 1603
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Leiden, Rhynland (present Zuid-Holland), Holland, Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden
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November 6, 1603
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Leiden, Rhynland (present Zuid-Holland), Holland, Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden
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November 6, 1603
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Leiden, South Holland, , Netherlands
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December 7, 1603
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Walloon Church, Leyden, South Holland, Netherlands
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1620 |
1620
Age 16
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1621 |
1621
Age 17
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1621
Age 17
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He arrived in Plymouth Colony on the voyage of the ship "Fortune".
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1621
Age 17
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Plymouth, MA
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1621
Age 17
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He arrived in Plymouth Colony on the voyage of the ship "Fortune".
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1632 |
1632
Age 28
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Duxbury, Massachusetts, USA
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