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In his article on the Vanderveers, Mr. Lester Dunbar Mapes [Genealogies of Long Island Families (Hoff), II:636–hereafter GLIF], refers to the will of Jan Vanderveer, dated 7 October 1776, proved 8 April 1782, and the mention of his daughter, Femmetje, baptized 10 April 1737, Flatbush, "wife of Guiliam Cornell." This abstract mentions no grandchildren and Mr. Mapes does not further identify this Guiliam Cornell. However, from Pelletreau [Fams of Hist Lineage], we have a birth date for Femmetje Vanderveer of 4 April 1737 and a death date of 26 February 1808. Pelletreau further states that she married (1) William Wyckoff and (2) Gilliam Cornell. The Alice Meigs Collection of the Jamaica Public Library provides the baptismal record of one child born to Gilliam Cornell and Femmetje Vanderveer: Margarietje Cornell, baptized 20 August 1769 at the Newtown Reformed Dutch Church, Queens, Long Island, named for her grandmother Margarietje Strycker.
http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~brouwergenealogydata/genealogy/p693....
Family: Jannetje Wyckoff b. 1 Jan 1701, d. 31 Oct 1774
Not the son of Aris Janse Vanderbilt & Hillitje Hillegonde Vanderbilt
https://www.frostandgilchrist.com/getperson.php?personID=I46446&tre...
(1) Frederick Doren Stone, Laura M. Stone and Harry Macy Jr.,"Jan Aertsen Vanderbilt, His Children and Grandchildren," New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Vol. 144, No. 4 (Oct. 2013), pp. 245-260, Vol. 145, No. 1 (Jan. 2014), pp. 65-75:
The Vanderbilt name has often appeared in print, but mostly in connection with Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt and his descendants. The rest of this large family has received much less attention. The first brief attempts at a genealogy of the early generations were made by Teunis G. Bergen in his Bergen Family and Early Settlers of Kings County, providing a basis for subsequent accounts. Most notably, in 1991 Jean MacNeish Rand published Some Descendants of Jan Aertsen Vanderbilt, starting with Bergen's genealogy and tracing the later generations except for the Commodore's family.
Bergen made a number of errors in reconstructing the family, most of which have never been corrected. While he mentioned some of his sources, his work is largely undocumented. Rand did list her sources, but rarely connected them to specific data. Both authors also omitted many relevant records, which were not as accessible as they are today.
The present article covers the life of the American founder, Jan Aertsen, his children, and his Vanderbilt grandchildren. It references the relevant records that have been found and corrects errors in prior accounts of the first three generations.
As explained below, when Jan Aertsen first came to New Netheriand he appears to have gone by van Utrecht, after his native province, but later became known as van de Bilt, presumably after his native town. In the area where he lived for many years (which later was part of Kings County) there were two other Jan Aertsens, one with the surname Middagh and another who did not adopt a surname. As Middagh and Vanderbilt were sometimes recorded as simply Jan Aertsen, this can present a problem to the researcher, but every attempt has been made to distinguish those records that pertain to Vanderbilt, who fortunately was often recorded with his adopted surname or signed documents with his distinctive windowpane mark. . . .
ARIS JANSEN VANDERBILT . . . was baptized in New Amsterdam 20 April 1653, witnessed by Albert Janszen, CornelIs Janszen Coely, Lysbeth Thysens, and Belitje Cornelis. His death date is not known, but he was alive in Flatbush in 1720. He married in Amersfort (Flatlands) 21 October 1677 HILLEGONDE/HILLITJE REMSEN, born in Beverwijck (Albany) 16 September 1653, death date not known, daughter of Rem Jansen Vanderbeeck and Jannetje Rappelje of the Wallabout, Brooklyn. She was a sister of Rem Remsen, who married Aris's sister Marretje.
In their accounts of Aris's family, Teunis Bergen and Jean Rand each listed eleven children, but both accounts are incorrect. In addition to being unaware of Aris's youngest child Catalyntje, Bergen and Rand misidentified three other alleged children. Hendrick was actually a grandson (son of Jan). Two others, Cornelis and Catharine, were Vanderveers rather than Vanderbilts:
• The alleged son Cornelis was said to be born 11 January 1697, died 22 January 1782, married Jannetje Wyckoff, and had a daughter Cornelia baptized in Somerville, New Jersey, 15 October 1738. Rand omitted the daughter, whose alleged baptism cannot be found, but she indicated (without citing a source) that the only Jannetje Wyckoff of that generation was said to have married a Cornelis Vanderveer. In fact, a 1937 RECORD article on the Vanderveer family shows a Cornelis Vanderveer of Flatbush who married Jannetje Wyckoff and died 22 January 1782, aged 85 years, 11 days, giving him a calculated birth date of 11 January 1697 - the exact birth and death dates that Bergen gave for Cornelis "Vanderbilt." In his account of the Vanderveers, Bergen omitted this Cornelis, presumably because he had mistakenly made him a Vanderbilt. There is no evidence that Aris Vanderbilt had such a son.
Bergen gave Aris a supposed daughter Catharine, born 1 March 1713, who married Jacobus Lefferts. Rand noted that in 1713 Aris's wife Hillitje would have been 60, so she suggested that Catharine might have been an "unknown grandchild or adoptee of Aris." The 1937 RECORD article noted above shows that Cornelis and Jannetje (Wyckoff) Vanderveer had a daughter Catharina, born 21 March 1723, who married Jacobus Lefferts. She was buried in Flatbush near her parents as "Catharina VanderVeer Huysvrouw van Jacob Lefferts." Despite the difference in birth dates, this is almost certainly the Catharine mentioned by Bergen. In his Genealogy of the Lefferts Family, on page 51, he has Jacobus Lefferts marrying Catharine Vanderveer, but on page 88 he calls the same Jacobus's wife Catharine Vanderbilt. There is no evidence of a Jacobus Lefferts who married a Catharine Vanderbilt in this time period, or that Aris Vanderbilt had a daughter by that name.
1697 |
January 11, 1697
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Flatbush, Kings County, Province of New York, Colonial America
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1722 |
March 30, 1722
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Freehold Township, Monmouth, NJ, United States
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1724 |
1724
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Freehold Township, Monmouth, NJ, United States
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1727 |
1727
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New York, Kings, New York, United States
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1729 |
May 30, 1729
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1731 |
1731
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of Flatbush
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1733 |
1733
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New York, Kings, New York, United States
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1734 |
1734
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New York, Kings, New York, United States
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1736 |
1736
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