Lot: J14 (Taxlots)

Lot
J14
Lot Group
Taxlots
Related Book Page
Property Was Used in 1660 For:
Original Grants and Farms Document(s)
Grant Lot Document(s)
Date Start
1656-10-23
Tax Lot Events
Full Stokes Entry (See images below)
"The Schrijers Hoeck where Michiel Jansen lives [there are] 2." — De Sille's List, of 1660.

Michiel Jansen, from Schrabbekercke ('s Heer Abtskerke, in the Province of Zeeland), sailed from the Texel in May, 1638, in "het Wapen Van Noorwegen," arriving in New Amsterdam August 4, 1638. His wife and two farm servants accompanied him. — Van Rensselaer Bowier MSS., 818. He went directly to Rensselaerswyck, where he remained until 1646, when he came to New Amsterdam with a fortune — according to Van Tienhoven. — Jameson's Nar. N. Neth., 375. His career in the north is interestingly set forth in the Van Rensselaer Bozvier MSS. The patroon, writing to Van Curler, says of Jansen, "I think he is one of the most upright farmers in the colony ... He writes most politely of all"— Ibid., 489.

On September 25, 1647, a few months after he came to New Amsterdam, Michiel Jansen was elected one of the original Nine Men. — Laws iff Ord., N. Neth., 75-8. He was one of the signers of the Vertoogh, which was written in his house on the Marckvelt Steegie (Block D, No. 21).

The bouwery at Pavonia, which he had bought from Jan Evertsen Bout, was destroyed in the Indian troubles of September, 1655. — A^. Y. Col. Docs., XII: 98-9. In the first horror of that event, when the record affirmed: "everything there is burned and everybody killed except the family of Michiel Hansen [sic]" (xW^m.), he fled to New Amsterdam with his wife and six children. As he desired "to gain a living, like the other inhabitants of this place, by doing something or another" {N. Y. Col. Docs., XIII : 61), he asked permission to tap, November 22, 1655, "as he has in this recent disaster been driven off and lost his all, and in addition is an old man with a large family." — Rec. N. Am., I: 405. As he was but forty-five years old {Van' Rensselaer Bowier MSS., 499), he seems to have been unduly depressed. His plea for the grant of a small lot next to Martin Clock's (as set forth in N. Y. Col. Docs., XIII: 61) is indeed pathetic. The council granted that lot to him, but annulled the grant, substituting this one, February 15, 1656. — Idem.

He had bought "the frame of a house" at Hoboocken from Nicholas Verlett, for 230 florins. The question of getting it across the river arose. On March 28, 1656, Verlett asked the council for a guard of six or eight soldiers. The council replied that it was inadvisable at that time — "the savages would again get excited, the more so, as the savages pretended . . . that the said house barring the nails, belonged to them." — N. Y. Col. Docs.. XIII: 67. However, the tavern was completed by October 23, 1656, when Schout de Sille "visited around and discovered ... in the evening, after bell ring some soldiers and sailors drinking, . . ." Jansen admitted that "two soldiers sat and played at backgammon, and that there were 3 sailors, who waited for their skipper," but pleaded "that nine o'clock had only struck." — Rec. N. Am., II: 194, 231.