Lot
N4
Lot Group
Taxlots
Related Book Page
Property Was Used in 1660 For:
Original Grants and Farms Document(s)
Grant Lot Document(s)
Date Start
1658-00-00
Related Ancestors:
Tax Lot Events
Full Stokes Entry (See images below)
Claes Carstensen also owned this house, next door to his own home. He sold it, October 15, 1653, to Jan Nagel, of Limburg. — Liher HH: 55 (Albany).
Nagel married, in September, 1652, Grietje Dircks, widow of Jan Schut, who had been killed while trading at the South River. — Rec. N. Am., I: 64.
In 1658, Grietje was married to her third husband, Barent Gerritsen, of Overyssel. — Marriages in Ref. Dutch Ch., 22. Guardians were appointed for the two families of children.
Jan Schut's little daughter, Fytje Jans, was seven years old. She was to receive 150 florins. Jurriaen Jansen Nagel was five years of age; Styntje, the baby, two years and six months. They each received 75 florins. Their mother was living in her house "lying and being north of the High Street, opposite de hal."[-] Min. of Orph. Court, trans, by O'Callaghan, 54-5.
Grietje and her last husband sold the house to Asset Levy, June 8, 1662. — Liber Deeds, A: 268. Jochem Backer was confirmed here in 1667. — Patents, II: 67 (Albany).
Site: No. 33 Stone Street.
['1 See Manatus Maps, No. 39, "Claes de Noorman." Cf. also Evjen's Scand. Immigrants, 51, et. seq.
[-] In the reference here cited, O'Callaghan translates de hal as "the shambles," or the market, giving to the word its usual continental meaning. In the translation of the Minutes issued by The Colonial Dames, Fernow interprets the meaning literally, and in this case evidently more correctly, as "the Hall." — See Block O, No. 9.
Nagel married, in September, 1652, Grietje Dircks, widow of Jan Schut, who had been killed while trading at the South River. — Rec. N. Am., I: 64.
In 1658, Grietje was married to her third husband, Barent Gerritsen, of Overyssel. — Marriages in Ref. Dutch Ch., 22. Guardians were appointed for the two families of children.
Jan Schut's little daughter, Fytje Jans, was seven years old. She was to receive 150 florins. Jurriaen Jansen Nagel was five years of age; Styntje, the baby, two years and six months. They each received 75 florins. Their mother was living in her house "lying and being north of the High Street, opposite de hal."[-] Min. of Orph. Court, trans, by O'Callaghan, 54-5.
Grietje and her last husband sold the house to Asset Levy, June 8, 1662. — Liber Deeds, A: 268. Jochem Backer was confirmed here in 1667. — Patents, II: 67 (Albany).
Site: No. 33 Stone Street.
['1 See Manatus Maps, No. 39, "Claes de Noorman." Cf. also Evjen's Scand. Immigrants, 51, et. seq.
[-] In the reference here cited, O'Callaghan translates de hal as "the shambles," or the market, giving to the word its usual continental meaning. In the translation of the Minutes issued by The Colonial Dames, Fernow interprets the meaning literally, and in this case evidently more correctly, as "the Hall." — See Block O, No. 9.