Lot: D11 (Taxlots)

Lot
D11
Lot Group
Taxlots
Related Book Page
Property Was Used in 1660 For:
Date Start
1659-09-01
Related Ancestors:
Description

Since Abraham de la Noy is listed as an innkeeper, it is possible that this house was also used as an inn.   Stokes is not clear about this. TD 11-05-09

Full Stokes Entry (See images below)
Pieter Hartgers, whose interests were all at Albany, where he had married a daughter of Annetje Jans {Fan Rensselaer Bowier MSS., 834), "being about to depart for Holland," on September i, 1659, sold this house to Abraham de la Noy, the inn-keeper.- — Liber Deeds, A: 175. He took back a purchase-money mortgage of 313 whole beavers. — Mortgages, 1654-1660, trans, by O'Callaghan, 140. Just a year later, he was obliged to repurchase it from Marryeke Lubbers, de la Noy's widow. — Liber Deeds, A: 247. The property was confiscated by Nicolls, and granted to Captain Sylvester Salisbury, later commander-in-chief of the garrison at Albany. — Patents, III: 9 (Albany). He sold it to John Sharpe, May 17, 1677 {Liber Deeds, XXX: 129-32), who is assessed here in 1677. For Salisbury, see Exec. Court. Min., ed. by V. H. Paltsits, I: 51, 386.

The site of this house is the rear of the building No. 88 Broad Street; the garden ran back to No. 80.

['] Jan Cornelissen seems to have lived in this house, the only one mentioned in his grant of June 23, 164;, and the last parcel which he sold (July 6, 1658). — Liber Deeds, A: 134. His certificate of burgherright, signed by Martin Cregier, is owned by the Title Guarantee and Trust Company. Reproduced in The Civic Ancestry of New York — City and State, by Edward Seymour Wilde, A. M.

[2] This is written in the Records "OlotFe Stuyvesant" — undoubtedly an error in translation.