Historical records matching Tryntje Tysse Bosch
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About Tryntje Tysse Bosch
Albert Heymans Roosa, Agriculturist from Gelderland with wife and eight children emigrated to New Netherland on the ship spotted Cow in April 1655 - O'Callahan, Documentary History of New York, iii, 36.
Indijk (added to Harmelen in 1820), Netherlands, located about a mile east of Woerden, Reeuwijk, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
Holland, Reusel-de Mierden, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands
Notes for Tryntje Matthijszen Bosch: Family was from Indijk, the Dutch part of Harmelen, Holland emigrated from Woerdon, Holland with husband and at least 4 children served as midwife in new land by 1655, licensed by Governor Peter Stuvyesant name is listed among first communicated at Old Dutch Church in Kingston, NY witness to baptism of her granddaughter Tryntje, daughter of Matthys and Maria. omitted in first publiction of Banns for Cornelis Barentsen + Elsie Jans Therefore, Tryntje likely died between Jan. 27 and Sept. 26, 1684 licensed by Governor Pieter Stuyvesant as a midwife
Trijntje Matthisdochter Bosch came from a family that lived around the countryside to the north and east of Woerden and also in the city of Woerden in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Her immediate family came from Indijk, the Dutch section of Harmelen, known to be living there in 1602. On March 17th, 1653, her husband gave power of attorney to Jan Corszoon Rietvelt in 1653 in Woerden for him to collect the proceeds and titles from the sale of her share of the goods she inherited from the estate of her father. She and her family emigrated from Holland shortly afterward, arriving in New Amsterdam and then settling in what was then known as Esopus, now Kingston, in Ulster County, New York. In 1655, she is recorded as being licensed as a midwife in Kingston by Governor Pieter Stuyvesant. When her husband was thrown in the British guardhouse for defending himself after being threatened by Captain Broadhead, Trintje and many of the townspeople marched on the British garrison at Kingston to demand his release. When Captain Broadhead told the people he would keep Cornelis as long as he wanted, she filed a complaint with the English Governor. At court, Cornelis was exonerated and Captain Broadhead was suspended from duty for violating the express order of the Governor not to harass the Dutch citizens. Captain Broadhead died three months later.
ID: I66941
Name: Tryntje Tys "Catherine" Bos
Sex: F
Birth: 1619 in Woerden, Holland
Occupation: Licensed Midwife in Esopus
Marriage 1 Cornelius Barentsen Slecht b: ABT 1616 in Holland
Married: ABT 1643 in Holland
Children
Chieltje Cornelissen Slecht b: ABT 1640 in Woerden, Utrect, Holland
Jan Slecht b: 1643 in Woerde, Utrecht, Holland
Jacomyntje "Jamima" Slecht b: 1645 in Woerde, Utrecht, Holland
Hendrick Cornelius Slecht b: 1645 in Woerde, Utrecht, Holland
Annetje Slecht b: 1647 in Woerde, Utrecht, Holland
Alstjen Barents Matthys Slecht b: 1651 in Woerde, Utrecht, Holland
Petronella Slecht b: 1656 in Ulster, New York, U.S.A
GEDCOM Note
She is the 6th great grandmother of President Theodore Rossevelt and also an ancestor of actor Marlon Brando. She was the daughter of Thys Jans Bos and Marrigie Maartens Bos. She and her husband were some of the original colonists of the New Holland Colony which became New York state.
Per Sara598: Mrs. Cornelis Barentsen Slecht is listed as a licensed Midwife for Esopus in 1655 - New Netherland Register, p.128
GEDCOM Note
findagrave.com
GEDCOM Note
Ulster County, N.Y. probate records in the office of the surrogate, and in the county clerk's office at Kingston, N.Y. Vol II. Abstracts of Wills and letters of administration, on file in the Surrogates Office, New York City
GEDCOM Note
!Doc. #321 is her PC Marriage: She m. Co
!Doc. #321 is her PC Marriage: She m. Cornelius Barentsen SLEIGHT per AF subm. by: (1) Nancy P. NESMITH, 5440 S. Lighthouse Rd., SLC, UT 84123 subm. #AF89-101593; (2) Bruce N. CARPENTER, 3737 S. 95th East Ave., Tulsa, OK 74145 subm. #AF89-100280. Death: She d. 28 Apr 1689 according to "History of Kingston" pg. 488 (Doc. #1146).
GEDCOM Note
was a midwife in Esopus licensed by Piet
was a midwife in Esopus licensed by Pieter Stuyvesant in 1655 From Ulster Co. Probate records Cornelis Barentsen, her husband, co-testator and herself desire that the whole estate shall be inherited by the survivor and at their deaths by the children: Jacomeyntie, Hendrick, Annetie, Mattys and Petronella. If any of the testators should re-marry, one half of the property si to be divided immediately among the children. A linen chest made by Jan Jansen which Petronella has, is above her portion. Witnesses Wessel Ten Broeck Signed Cornelis Barentse Slecht Jan Heyndericksz by me Tryntye Tysen Bosch
GEDCOM Note
Trintje bos story as midwife in New Amsterdam • ID: I2887 • Name: Tryntje Matthijsdr Bosh • Name: Tryntje Tyssen Bos • Name: Tryntje Tynebrouck • Name: Trijntje Bosch 1 • Sex: F • Birth: ABT 1619 in Indijk, Harmelen, Holland • Death: 26 S
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1. Ancestral File.
1. Ancestral File.
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Unrecognized GEDCOM tag UID [31150]: 4F3
Unrecognized GEDCOM tag UID [31150]: 4F3F3DA241B3F548AADF3445BA7E1CB0A44C
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!6474 Slack Relatives by Roscoe C. Keene
!6474 Slack Relatives by Roscoe C. Keeney Jr, copy in my possession, pg.6 "The first Slecht (also spelled Sleght, Sleight, Slaghtl, and Slack) came from Woerdon, Holland, with his wife and at least four children in or about 1652, settled at Kingston, New York, and was regarded as one of the founders of the settlement and the builder of its stockade. He was appointed to the Board of Schepens (colonial assembly) by Gov. Peter Stuyvesant, before Yew York was yielded by the Dutch to the British. His occupations was listed as a brewer and owner o land in the New Paltz Grant. In Holland he had married Tyrntje Tysse Bos. In their new homeland she served as a midwife. The names of both Mr. and Mrs. Slecht appear on a marble plaque in the westibule of Old Dutch Church in Kingston, along with the names of the others who were first communicants there. The records also show that Mr. Slecht fought against the British in 1666 and, as a result, was banished (perhaps imprisons) for three years. In 1684 Mr. Slecht was married to Elsje Jans, widow of Hendrick Jochensen Schoonmacher. Children of Cornelius Barentse Slecht in his first marriage were: Jan, baptized 3-6-1643 in Holland and captured and later killed by Indians in America; Jacomyntre, baptized in Holland and on 7-25-1645, married three times and listed in the ancestry of the Roosevelt family in America; Annetje, baptized on 10-18-1647 in Holland, the wife of Cornelius Hoogeboom; Hendrick Cornelius; Mattys, who married Marie Crespel; and Petronella, who became the wife of Jochem Schoonmacher." "HISTORY OF THE PENNINGTON, SLACK, WATSON, GREE, MCEWAN AND POTTER FAMILIES by Mary Trickle of Baker, Oregon 1956" FHL 468,305 item #5 pg 71 "Cornelius Barentssen Slecht, of Woerden, Holland, was born about 1624; came to New Amsterdam in the ship "Hope" accompanied by his wife Tryntie Tysen Bos. Their son Hencrick Slecht and four under age children, Jacomeyite, Annette, Mattye and Petronella, was in Eusopus as early as 1652; he was sergeant of the company which built the Eusopus stockade. On May 31, 1653, he signed an agreement with Governor Peter Stuyvesant to build a stockade and make peace with the Indians. His son was captured by Indians in 1659 and was killed; his daughter was captured in 1663 and compelled to marry an Indian. In 1661 Eusopus became Wyltwick and he became a member of the first board of three Aldermen (Shapens). In 1663 he was engaged in the Indian attack on Wyltwick. On March 4, 1661 he was one of those who signed a contract with the Reverend Hermanus Blohm. He was also a amember of the Shepens in 1664, 1666, 1667, and 1671. He was one of the leaders in the insurrection against the oppression of the English Commandant in 1667. In 1669 Wyltwick was known as Kingston and in 1676 he became a member of the Court of Sessions. in 1663 he was arrested with his son Mattys and his son-in-law Jan Eltinge, for signing a petition to Governor Dongan asking the liberty of choosing their own officers for the town courts and to transport their own produce. He died in 1691; he married twice, firstly Tryntie Tysen Bos who died in 1676; and secondly Sept 26, 1684, Elsie Jans widow of Hendrick Jochemz of Breestic, she was a sister of his first wife, and both were half sisters of Governor Peter Stuyvesant..." HISTORY: CORNELIUS BARENTSE SLECHT AND SOME OF HIS DESCENDANTS, FHL US/CAN 929.272 s1225, PG 5-7: Corcnelius Barentse Slecht, founder in America of the family variously known as Sleght, Sleight, Slaght, and Slack (although not including Eliphalet Slack and his descendants), came from Woerdon, Holland with his wife and at least four children on or about the year 1652 (Van Wagnen p xxxiv). He settled at Kingston, NY where he is accounted as one of the founders of the city and the bhilder of its stockade, the outline of which may still be traced (Olde Ulster). He was appointed to the Board of Schepens (the colonial assembly) as a representative by Cov. Stuyvesant (NYG&B. 69). Some state that Cornelius was a brother in law to Peter Stuyvesant, but evidence for this seems debatable. By occupation he was brewer and the owner of land in the New Paltz Grant. His wife, Tryntje Tysse Bos, served as mid-wife in the community of Esopus (now Kingston). The names of Cornelius and Tyrntje Slecht, with about a dozen others, appear on a mable plaque in the westible of the Old Dutch Church in Kingston as the list of first communicants there. The records also indicate the Cornelius, with two other property owners, had signed a petition asking the church authorities in Holland for a postor and pledging their possessions as a guarantee of salary. When the British under Richard nichols won control over New Amsterdam, the subjugation over the whole fo the Dutch colony was a forgone conclusion but not in the eyes of some of the Hudson Valley settlers like Slecht. On 16 Feb 1666 he took up arms against the English in revolt against their authority and was brutally and severly beaten by a small detachment of British soldiers. For his temerity Cornelius was banished for three years. Where he went is not clear, although he seems to have gone to Flusing, NY. At least, in 1669, he purchased property and 3 years later sold it (Flatbush Deeds A-64). The last major account of his life is an extensive and detailed ducument in the County clerk's office in Kingston (the county sear of Ulster County) which concerned the projected marriage of Cornelius, his first wife having died, and Elsje Jans who was the widow of Hendrich Jochemsen Schoonmaker. This wedding was held 26 Sept 1684 in the Kingston Church. Presumably, Cornelius Slecht and his fir wife were buried in the churchyard of the Old Dutch Church at Kingston, but there is no record to substantiate this. The children of Cornelius Barentse Slecht and his wife, Tryntje Tysse Bos were: 2.Jan - bapt 6 March 1643 in the church at Woerdon, Holland. He was captured by the Indians on one of their forays, for ced to run the gauntlet and killed. 3.Jacomyntie - bapt at Woerdon 25 July 1645. She married (1) Jan B. Kunst, (2) Gerrit Foecken, and (3) Jan Eltinge. She is in the ancestry of the Roosevelt family. 4.Annetje - bapt at Woerdon 18 Oct 1647. Married Cornelius Hoogeboom. 5.Hendrick Cornelius - md Elsje Lieveling 6.Mattys - md Maria Crespel 7.Petronella - md Jochem Schoommacher Note: Valuable data on Cornelius Slecht may be found in the following: Ulster County, NY Probate Records I-32, NYG&B 31-163, 69-; Flusing Records, pg 53, Schoonmaker "History of Kingston"; and Fl Van Wagnen "Garrett Conrad Van Wagnen.")
GEDCOM Note
Life Sketch
In 1653 she was licensed to be a midwife for Esopus. Also her birth is so early that it would be no surprise if she were instead the daughter of the one shown as her grandfather.
According to FindaGrave, she is the 6th great grandmother of President Theodore Rossevelt and also an ancestor of actor Marlon Brando. She was the daughter of Thys Jans Bos and Marrigie Maartens Bos. She and her husband were some of the original colonists of the New Holland Colony which became New York state.
GEDCOM Note
Srce: family records as of 7/17/1999 an
Srce: family records as of 7/17/1999 and The Huguenot Historical Society PO Box 339 New Paltz, NY 12561 (914) 255-1660 familytreemaker.com/use...Patrick-L-Driscoll/GENE1-0014.html
GEDCOM Note
death date
Her death date is the date of the 1st Banns announced for the second marriage of Cornelis so her death would have been some time before that.
GEDCOM Note
Non-standard gedcom data: 1 _IFLAGS 0
Non-standard gedcom data: 1 _IFLAGS 0
Tryntje Tysse Bosch's Timeline
1620 |
1620
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Woerden, Woerden, Utrecht, The Netherlands
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1636 |
December 14, 1636
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Woerden, Utrecht, Netherlands
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1641 |
1641
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Woerden, S Holland, Netherlands
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1642 |
July 25, 1642
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Woerden, Woerden, Utrecht, Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden (nu Duitsland)
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1642
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Snelle, Zuid Holland, Netherlands
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1643 |
March 6, 1643
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Woerden, Utrecht, Netherlands
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1647 |
October 18, 1647
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Woerden, Utrecht, Nederland (Netherlands)
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1649 |
1649
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Woerden, Woerden, Utrecht, The Netherlands
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1651 |
1651
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Woerden, Utrecht, Netherlands
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