Lot
C27
Lot Group
Taxlots
Related Book Page
Property Was Used in 1660 For:
Original Grants and Farms Document(s)
Grant Lot Document(s)
Date Start
1659-07-00
Related Ancestors:
Description
Purchased on speculation. Stokes.
Tax Lot Events
Full Stokes Entry (See images below)
Dirck Jansen, from Oldenburgh, skipper of the "Hope," bought this lot and house from Abraham Lubbersen in July, 1659, merely as a speculation. He sold it, April 16, 1661, to Tomas Jansen Mingael. — Liber Deeds, A: 168, 203.
The skipper was adventurous and litigious. On one of his voyages from Curasao, he brought a negro woman for Cornelis Pluvier. Payment not forthcoming promptly, he sued Pluvier, and recovered judgment for "150 pieces of eight." — Cal. Hist. MSS., Z)m<c^, 229, 333.
In November, 1662, he gave Deliverance Lamberton a bill of sale for the "Hope," — then sued him for 2,000 guilders. Lamberton declared that the deed was merely a contract, made pro forma, so that the bark should be in his name, and therefore not liable to seizure, or "to be made a prize of." Dirck Jansen insisted that Lamberton had guaranteed the bark from seizure, which the Englishman did not positively deny, but he said that Jansen had "informed several in the Virginias, that the bark and goods belonged to him," therefore that he (Lamberton) could not have prevented the seizure. This tale of piracy — the nations were not at war — is told in a few dry words in the Records of New Amsterdavi (IV: 270, 278, 279, 282, 283). The outcome is not entirely clear. The Virginia court was, naturally, pro-English. It seems probable that the skipper's boastful loquacity lost him the "Hope." — Ibid., 323, 328.
The records prove that Abraham Lubbersen's lot, next north, was still unbuilt upon in 1660, as the Plan shows. — Liber Deeds, B: 32.
The skipper was adventurous and litigious. On one of his voyages from Curasao, he brought a negro woman for Cornelis Pluvier. Payment not forthcoming promptly, he sued Pluvier, and recovered judgment for "150 pieces of eight." — Cal. Hist. MSS., Z)m<c^, 229, 333.
In November, 1662, he gave Deliverance Lamberton a bill of sale for the "Hope," — then sued him for 2,000 guilders. Lamberton declared that the deed was merely a contract, made pro forma, so that the bark should be in his name, and therefore not liable to seizure, or "to be made a prize of." Dirck Jansen insisted that Lamberton had guaranteed the bark from seizure, which the Englishman did not positively deny, but he said that Jansen had "informed several in the Virginias, that the bark and goods belonged to him," therefore that he (Lamberton) could not have prevented the seizure. This tale of piracy — the nations were not at war — is told in a few dry words in the Records of New Amsterdavi (IV: 270, 278, 279, 282, 283). The outcome is not entirely clear. The Virginia court was, naturally, pro-English. It seems probable that the skipper's boastful loquacity lost him the "Hope." — Ibid., 323, 328.
The records prove that Abraham Lubbersen's lot, next north, was still unbuilt upon in 1660, as the Plan shows. — Liber Deeds, B: 32.