RWG4 The Unpublished 1906 Supplement to the 1904 "Wynkoop Genealogy"
RWG4.

This edition Copyright © 1999-2007 by Christopher H. Wynkoop,
All Rights Reserved

This edition is for private, not-for-profit use only. For all other use, especially commercial, copyright applies and permission must be sought from the author of this electronic edition, Christopher H. Wynkoop, at [email protected]. This edition may not be published on any other web page, web site, newsgroup, mailing list or other media of any kind without the author's express written permission. Commercial use of any kind is strictly and expressly prohibited. The author is not legally liable for any errors or omissions that may have crept in; this electronic text is provided on an "as is" basis.

    Although this manuscript is dated February, 1906 it is evident from internal evidence that Richard Wynkoop was adding information to it as late as September 15, 1906, the date Anna Strong Wynkoop, (1402), was married. I have not been able to find any evidence so far that this manuscript was ever published, although if anyone does know of such an event I would be grateful if they would contact me at [email protected] and allow to me clear up any misrepresentations made here.

    This manuscript is obviously a work in progress. The index seems to be from an earlier version, probably one in ink or pencil, for it is incomplete and evidently Richard Wynkoop had trouble reading his own handwriting because some of the entries were mispelled and misplaced. I have corrected as many of the mispellings in the manuscript as possible. Where the index, the 1904 Genealogy and the body of the manuscript do not agree with each other, I have taken the 1904 edition of Wynkoop Genealogy in the United States of America to be the final arbiter regarding such spellings. This genealogy was heavily proofread and submitted for publication as a finalized product and I have assumed that Richard Wynkoop was satisfied with the results. Some mispellings, eg. Cristian, I have let stand since the name appears only once, in the body of the manuscript and not at all in the index or the published genealogy. Corrections and additions that Richard Wynkoop added in pencil have been added to this published version as he would have wished had he elected to send this edition to press.

    A few notes on this edition:

    The supplied index is not strictly alphabetical due to corrected mispellings. You will be better served by using the "Find" feature of your web-browser to search this manuscript than to depend on this "work-in-progress."

    Notes in [square brackets] only, are my additions and comments. All other notes are Richard Wynkoop's.

    There were no illustrations or photographs filmed with this manuscript back in 1942 so the places where such illustrations should have gone are marked with the words, "CUT." I know where several of the photographs that Richard Wynkoop intended to use in the Supplement may be found and will be inserting them in their rightful places once I can obtain copies.

    Finally, I have endeavored to present this manuscript in much the same format as the 1904 edition, displaying all numbers which relate back to that edition in Bold Face type and italicizing all book titles. This, however, was not their appearance in the original manuscript. There was only so much formatting that one could do with a typewriter in 1906. I feel confident, however, that the author would have insisted that the Supplement be published in the same format as the 1904 edition, especially since it was designed to be inserted into all the unsold copies of that book.

    This manuscript then, is a cooperative effort between Richard Wynkoop and myself, some 93 years removed. Speaking for both him and myself, we hope it brings new insight into the state of the family as it existed in 1906. Richard's first edition, published in 1866, was 34 pages long. I'm sure he would have appreciated the irony that his last edition was exactly the same length. It somehow feels fitting and proper that this is the way it should end.

    Best wishes,

    Chris


WYNKOOP GENEALOGY

Supplement, February,     1906.

Copyright, 190, by Richard Wynkoop

Additions and corrections.

(The numbers are identical with the book numbers of the Genealogy).

    There was a John Wincopp, Gent., whose name was spelled also Wincook and Wincocks, a member of the Eastern Association Committee, for Lincol[n]shire, Cambridge, Essex, Hereford, Huntingdon, Norfolk and Suffolk, supporters of Parliament against Charles I. ( See Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches - Carlyle, N. Y., 1897, Vol., iii., p. 340). It was probably this John who was the patentee of land in Virginia, as mentioned on page 1 of the genealogy, rather than the Rev. Dr. John, of page 2.
    The drawing of the shield, given on page 3, was not accurate. Two stars (�toiles), not rowels (mullets), should be in the first quarter and two in the fourth, but none in the second. The description of the shield is as follows:- Wyncoop (Wynkoop) s- Amsterdam. Ec.: Aux I el 4 d'azur � un rocher d'arg., mouv. d'une mer du m�me, acc. en chef de deux �toiles (5) d'or; aux 2 et 3 d'azur au lion d'arg., cour. d'or. Armorial G�n�ral J. B. Riestap, Gouda, 1884) The shield is here given, from a new drawing.
    (It is not claimed herein that this line is descended from the man to whom this shield was appropriate.)

Cut No. I.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy-February, 1906-begun.      2.

    The frontispiece of the Genealogy represented the place at Hurley, N. Y., which was owned and occupied by James Davis Wynkoop (873), at the time of his death, June 1, 1904.
    The bookplate here given, is a copy from a copper-plate engraving, which originally bore the name of Peter Wynkoop (510).

Cut No. 2.

    1. Cornelius Wynkoop. It seems that he was a resident of Kingston, although he owned land at Hurley, known as Wynkoop Farm.
    8. Benjamin Wynkoop. He was one of the seven collectors, January 7, 1723, to receive �300, 12, 3, under Act of the General Assembly. He was for the South Ward, New York City. ( Journal No. 2, Chamberlain's Office, p. 191, Controller's Office).
    9. Cornelius Wynkoop. His wife, Hendrika "Nukerck," was born Nov., 7, 1692. He had an inclination to see other lands beyond the sea, and left his father's house, in Kingston, May 18, 1708, and sailed from New York for the West Indies, June 18, on his way for Karson Island. When in sight of that island, the vessel was captured by a French privateer and taken to San Domingo, Hispaniola; thence he sailed? August 10, for St. Thomas, and arrived August 21; sailed for New York September 16, and arrived there, October 4, 1708. ( Recorded by himself in his family Bible).

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    12. Derrick Wynkoop. Cornelius Wynkoop (9) recorded in his family Bible: "Margriet Cole, wife of my brother Derick Wynkoop", as witness to the baptism of Petrus (66).
    18. Nicholas Du Puis. He married Wyntje Roosa; first publication of banns, March 22, 1707, Dutch Church, Kingston. She was probably descended from Albert Heymans, by his wife, Wyntje Ariens. Heymans took the name of Roosa. (See Heyman, Albert, p. 21 of this genealogy.) The grandparents of Nicholas, Nicholas and Caterina (Renard) Du Puis, were from Artois, France.
    Maria, daughter of Nicholas and Wyntje, married Capt. James Hyndshan, and had a descendant, Sophia Hyndshan, wife of Wilson Bushnell, of Council Bluffs, Iowa.
    40. Tobias Wynkoop. He was a Captain in the old French and Indian War, and went with his command to Fort Edward, where they remained until they were discharged.
    53. Benjamin Wynkoop. The inscription upon his gravestone is as follows:- "Here lies buried the body of Benjamin Wynkoop, of Fairfield. He was born in New York, May ye 5th, Old Stile, 1705, & departed this Life Sept. 1st., 1766, in ye 62 year of his age." ( Hist. of Kingston, Schoonmaker, pp. 136, 137.) ( Hist of Fairfield Co., Conn., Hurd, 1881).
    9. Cornelius and Hendrika (Nukerck or Newkirk) Wynkoop, had the following children:-
    57. Judith, b. Aug., 22, 1712 ("Judickje");
    58. Elizabeth, b. Dec., 31, 1714;
    59. Cornelia, b. March 15, 1717;
    60. Johannes, b. Aug., 19 (13?), 1719 ("Johannis");
    61. Catharina, b. Feb., 18, 1722 ("Cathrina");

( Mail & Express, of N. Y., of Feb., 13, 1904.)

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    62. Leah, b. May 24, 1724; d. Jan., 28, 1726;
    63. Adrien, b. Aug., 14, 1726; d. Oct., 21, 1726 (The Major Adriaan (63), of the Genealogy, is 64A. hereof);
    64. Leah, b. Sept., 29, 1727;
    64A. Adrien, b. Apl., 5, 1730. This is the Major Adriann (63) of the Genealogy;
    65. Cornelius C., b. Nov., 4, 1732; d. about Feb., 1808, in New York City. His wife, Mary Catharine Ruehl, was born Sept., 7, (N. S.), 1739, and died about 1816 or 1817. She was the daughter of Gustav Martin and Maria Margaretha (B�mper) Ruhl, both of New York, married April 12, 1737, as per record of the Lutheran Church, N. Y., noted in a book of the Holland Society, N. Y., and as shown in their own records, as also by the Burhans' copy of their records in the N. Y. G. & B. Society's Library collection. The death of a Cornelius C. Wynkoop in 1796, was of Cornelius C. (211), son of Cornelius C. (65). Mar�tje M. (Bimpe) and her second husband, George Petterson, died each in January 1776, at Walkill, N. Y., where they had been living, with Domine Johann Michael Kern (pronounced Karn), who had married Mar�tje's daughter, Anna Sabina Ruehl, whose first husband, Nicholas de Ronde, had been drowned in Holland, while he was there on business.
    Cornelius removed from New York to Hurley, just before the war broke out, and he was in the place named last, when Kingston was burned. After the war, he returned to New York. In his last sickness, his grandson, George Henry Stanton (457), among others, tried in

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           5.

vain to rouse him to consciousness;
    66. Petrus;
    67. Maria. These two were twins. Maria was born Dec., 20, 1734. (All the dates of births are from the family Bible of Cornelius C. Wynkoop (65). Other parts of the information have been derived from Miss. Sarah Bleecker Reynolds (833), or through her from Henrietta (212), Mrs. Van Solingen.
    94. Col. Cornelius D. Wynkoop. It was at his house, and not at that of Cornelius E. (295), who lived also in Marbletown, that Genl. George Washington passed a night, as per Mr. Schoonmaker's minute as follows:- "Gen. Washington passed the night of Nov. 16, 1782, with his companion in arms, Col. Cornelius (D) Wynkoop, at his homestead at Stone Ridge, which stands unaltered, and was for many years the residence of John Lounsbury. ( History of Kingston, p. 335).
    106. Catharine Wynkoop. Her husband, Joseph Gasherie, went as clerk of Col. Hardenburgh's regiment to Fort Edward, in the old French and Indian War, of 1756, and the forces remained there until they were discharged. ( Hist. of Kingston, pp. 136, 137).
    112. Captain Evert Wynkoop. In the old French and Indian War, Captain Evert Wynkoop and his command, went, with other forces, to Fort Edward, where they reported to the General in command, and remained there until they were discharged. ( Hist. of Kingston, Schoonmaker, pp. 136, 137).
    117. Cornelius Swart. His wife, Mary Beekman, is No. 81, of this Genealogy.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           6.

    154. Adrian Wynkoop. His wife carried behind her, on the horse, a little slave girl, whose descendants were manumitted about 1837. (See 710).
    174. Phebe Wynkoop. Her husband, Judge John Vining, was son of Capt. Benjamin Vining, of Salem, N. J., by his first wife, Mary Middleton. ( More Colonial Homesteads, Harland, p. 290).
    205. John C. Wynkoop, born Jan., 17, 1761 ("Johannis"); died July 25, 1796. His wife, Lydia Silvester, was of Kinderhook, N. Y., and lived there for some years, and afterwards at Kingston. His mother, Mary C. (65), went to him in his last sickness, and remained until after his death.
    206. Maria Wynkoop, born July 1, 1762. Her husband, Henry Stanton, had married 1st., May 15, 1782, Patience Levernich, daughter of the Rev. William and Dorothy (Morse) Levernich, of Newtown, L. I. She died without issue and Henry Stanton married then, 2d., the above Maria Wynkoop, April 1st., 1786. He was a saddler and afterwards a planter. We also find in the old New York records that [he] ran the Brooklyn Ferry and is also found in association with Noah Waterbury, of Williamsburgh (known as the "Father of Williamsburgh"), whose sister, Elizabeth, married Henry Stanton's son, Richard Stanton. Extensive researches instituted by Wm. Austin Macy, M. D., (1659), and prosecuted also by the compiler, lead to the conclusion that Henry Stanton was descended from one George Stanton, a planter in the Island of Jamaica, British West Indies, who married 1st., Catharine ______, who was

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           7.

buried Sept., 12, 1696, at St. Catharine's, having had several children, among them, Anna Maria, born Mch., 17, 1690, baptized Mch., 19, and William. This George Stanton married 2d., Esther [Davies]. In 1698, he removed to the City of New York and purchased two parcels of land, on the westerly side of Nassau Street, between John and Fulton Streets. He established a brewery. In 1701, he conveyed the whole of one of the parcels and the quarter part of the other. He died in 1708, intestate, and his widow, Esther, administered upon his estate, July 8, 1708. His estate appeared in the assessment list for many years afterwards. Esther administered in 1720, upon the estate of Henry York, a debtor. In 1721, she conveyed land in Jamaica I., and was described as "relict of George Stanton, planter, in Jamaica, but later of the City of New York, in North America." Her eldest son, George Stanton, a sail-maker, returned to Jamaica, and was there in 1726.
    Henry Stanton, second son of George and Esther Stanton, a cooper, was born May 17, 1699, it is said according to family tradition, in Liverpool, England. He died June 14, 1759. It is not improbable that his father had to go to England to procure an outfit for his brewery, and was accompanied by his wife, and that this accounts for this son having been born in Liverpool. The same family tradition states that this Henry Stanton married a Mary Blanck, but this marriage has not thus far been discovered among any of the records, so the

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           8.

date cannot thus far be confirmed. She is said, in the family notes referred to, to have been born Dec., 1, 1705. She died September 7, 1792. There is a record among the marriages of the Dutch Church, of New York, of a Henry Stanton and a Maria Warner, Oct., 18, 1732, but there has been nothing to show that this was the Henry and Mary our notes refer to, and nothing to explain otherwise where the record among the family papers came from, of the marriage of this Henry to Mary Blanck.
    George Stanton, the first child of Henry and Mary Stanton, a carpenter, was born Jan., 29, 1733, and died Oct., 27, 1809. He married April 24, 1757, Agnes Blanck, who was born Jan., 6, 1732 and died Oct., 30, 1817. Their first child, Mary, was born Oct. 14, 1758 and died in 1768. The second child, Henry, born Sept., 12, 1761, married 2dly., Maria Wynkoop (206).
    207. Catharine Wynkoop, born Oct., 24, 1763 ("Catharina"). Her mother-in-law was Catharine Bruyn, not Bremer. Her husband was Capt. Jonathan Hasbrouck. He and his command were among the forces that gathered at Fort Edward in the old French and Indian War of 1756.
    209. Anna Sabina Wynkoop, born July 1, 1766. Her husband, Henry H. Schoonmaker, whose second "H" probably stood for the initial of his father's name, was born Sept., 23, 1767; bap., Nov., 27. He was the first child of Hezekiah and Deborah (Schoonmaker) Schoonmaker. Deborah was the daughter of Hendrick and Hannah (Wittiker) Schoonmaker. ( Hendrick Jochemsen (Schoonmaker), married Ellen Jane Breested. Their second child, Hendrick, twin with

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           9.

Folckert, bap., May 17, 1665, married Mch., 24, 1688, Geertruy de Witt, bap., Oct., 15, 1668, daughter of Tijerck Claessen and Barbara (Andriessen) de Witt. Hendrick, fourth child of Hendrick and Gertrude, bp., June 3, 1694, married Oct., 16, 1724, banns registered Sept., 27, Tryntjen Osterhoud. Hezekiah, sixth child of Hendrick and Tryntjen, b. June 24, 1733, bp. July 1,; died Jan., 6, 1798; mar., Nov., 20, 1766, Deborah Schoonmaker, and had issue;- Henry, who married Anna Sabina Wynkoop (209). ( See N. Y. G. & B. Record and Schoonmaker's Hist of Kingston, pp. 487-9.)
    209A. Cornelius Wynkoop, b. July 20, 1768; d. Aug., 3, 1768; son of Cornelius C. (65), and Maria Catharina (Ruhl) Wynkoop.
    210. Elizabeth Wynkoop, b. Nov., 14, 1769.
    211. Cornelius C. Wynkoop, b. May 7, 1772, died in New York City, August, 1796 - not in 1808 - of hasty consumption. His mother had been called to Kingston to the death bed of her son, John C., (205), and Cornelius was dead and buried before she could get back in the sloop. A book plate belonging to him, or to his father (65), was made the basis of the cut on page No. 7, of this Genealogy.
    212. Henrietta Wynkoop, b. Oct., 22, 1774, in Kingston, N. Y., married about 1822, Dr. Henry Van Solingen. She lived with the Reynolds family (473), from 1839 to 1860. ("She was a lovely, bright, handsome woman"---Miss. S. B. R. 833.)
    213. Augustus Wynkoop, b. Sept., 27, 1777; bap., Oct., 14, at Kingston, N. Y.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           10.

    292. Judge Dirck Wynkoop (name equivalent to Dierryk or Diederick, rendered Theodore, or Richard, perhaps derived from Theodoric). In a list of sufferers by the burning of Kingston, on October 15, 1777, Dirck Wynkoop is credited with houses No. 72 and No. 68, on a diagram. The former was on the westerly side of Green Street, south of Crown Street, and a little north of Big Vly Lane. At this house, Gen. Washington and his Staff dined on Nov., 16, 1782. In 1820, this house was occupied by his daughter Ariantje (512), and Margaret (516), Sarah (514) was then dead, and probably Catharine (513), also. The other house, No. 68, at the N. W. corner of Pearl and Fair Streets. (It was probably more imposing than the one on Green Street, but may not have been so spacious.) He had owned a brewery also, but may have parted with it. It was reported as destroyed, but rumor said that it was saved by the bestowal of beer on the soldiers. ( Hist. of Kingston, pp. 308, 339, 447, 448.)
    295. Major Cornelius E. Wynkoop. He had a house at Marbletown, as shown by the birth there of his niece, Margaret (516), in 1778. It was not at his house that Genl. Washington was entertained all night in 1782, but at the double stone house, at Stone Ridge, Marbletown, then owned by Col. Cornelius D. Wynkoop (94), and afterwards by John Lounsbury. ( Hist of Kingston, p. 335).
    300. Cornelia Tappen, bap., Nov., 25, 1744, mar., Feb., 7, 1770, Gen. George Clinton, b. July 26, 1739, in Little Britain, Ulster Co., N. Y.; d. Apr., 20, 1812, in Washington, D.C.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           11.

He was son of Charles and Elizabeth (Denniston) Clinton. George was clerk of the Courts of Ulster County from Sept., 18, 1759 for many years. He was a Revolutionary General and Governor of the State of New York, and later he was Vice President of the United States ( The Clinton family trace their origin to a cousin and follower of William the Conqueror, who received the grant of a Lordship of Clinton, in Oxfordshire, from which place the family name is derived.)
    Charles and Elizabeth (Denniston) Clinton were married in Ireland and had three children born there. They came to Little Britain, where they had four more children born, among whom were Col. James, born in Little Britain, Aug., 9, 1736, and General George, who married Cornelia Tappen (300). James became a Brigadier General and a Major General. Later he was Surveyor of lands in New York. (Olde Ulster, Vol. I, pp. 52-54, 56, 62). Charles brought with him to this country his sister, Christiana, widow of John Beattie, and her grandson, Reading Beattie, M. D., married Christina Wynkoop (390).
    The children of George and Cornelia (Tappen) (300) Clinton were as follows:-
    i. Catharine Clinton, b. Nov., 5, 1770 in New Windsor; died Jan., 10, 1811, in Poughkeepsie; mar., 1st., Oct., 25, 1791, John Taylor, of New York, who died Nov., 26, 1791; mar., 2d., Maj. Genl., Pierre Van Cortlandt.
   ii. Cornelia Tappen Clinton, b. June 29, 1774; d. Mch., 28, 1810; mar., Nov., 6, 1794, "Citizen" Edmond Charles Genet, Minister from the French Republic.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           12.

  iii. George Washington Clinton, b. Oct., 18, 1778, in Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; d. Mar., 27, 1813; mar., Sept., 19, 1808, Anna Floyd, dau., of Genl. William Floyd.
   iv. Elizabeth Clinton, b. July 10, 1780; d. Apl., 8, 1825; mar., Oct., 25, 1803, Matthias B. Tallmadge.
    v. Martha Washington Clinton, b. Oct., 12, 1783; d. Feb., 20, 1795.
   vi. Maria Clinton, b. Oct., 6, 1785 in New York; d. Apl., 17, 1839; mar., Dr. Stephen D. Beekman.
    332. Benjamin Meyer. He married Rachel Meyer and had a daughter, Louisa, who married Cornelius Persen Brink, and had a son, Benjamin M. Brink, of Kingston.
    394. Maria Helena Wynkoop. She had two children, besides Wynkoop Wirts, namely:-
          i. Sarah Wirts or Wurts; mar., _____ Johnson, and had one son, Wirts Johnson;
         ii. Margaretta Wirts; mar., Samuel Ross. They had six children, of whom three grew to adult age:-
               i. Mary Helen Ross, d. Oct., 16, 1887, unm.;
              ii. Margaretta Anna Ross, d. May 1901; mar., her cousin, James Lefferts, who died about 1900. They had children:- (i) Walter Ross Lefferts; (ii) Minnie Ross Lefferts, who mar. and had five children; and (iii) Henry Groyner Lefferts, who was married.
             iii. Wm. Walter Ross; d. Feb., 28, 1898, unm.
    424. Mary Vining. It is said that Marie Antoinette, of France, told Thomas Jefferson that the French officers had descri-

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bed Mary in such terms that she, the Queen, would be pleased to see Mary at the Tuileries. A written offer of marriage of Caesar Rodney is existence. It is said further, that she was under engagement of marriage to Genl. Anthony Wayne, at the time of her death. ( Adrian Garrett Wynkoop (1192), referring to Amer. Hist. Register, July 1895, No. II, p. 1190.)
    425. John Vining. He was called the "Patrick Henry of Delaware," also the "Pet of Delaware". He was a brilliant lawyer and great wit. He was a member of the first Continental Congress. ( More Colonial Homesteads, Harland, p. 290.)
    457. George Henry Stanton. He married, Jan., 1, 1811, Sophia Avery, who died Dec., 6, 1863. Their children were:-
          i. Henry Augustus Stanton, b. Aug.,     , 1811; d. ae., 10 mos.;
         ii. George Edgar Stanton, b. Sept., 3, 1812; d. Nov., 12, 1890, 78 yrs.; mar., Augusta Arthur. Children:-
               a. Son name unknown, b. Jan., 23, 1836, at Auburn, N. Y.
               b. Agnes Stanton, b. July 28, 1837, at Ossining, N. Y. (then Sing Sing); mar., Lucius C. Pardee. They live at Chicago, Ill.; Children:-
                   (i) Rodney Pardee;
                  (ii) Lucius Pardee, b. Dec., 24, 1866;
                 (iii) Agnes Pardee, mar., Chas. Jacobsen, and had a child, (ea) Owen Pardee Jacobsen;
                 (iv) Anna Pardee.
               c. Julia Frances Stanton, b. May 8, 1841; d. ae;, 2 1/2 yrs.; born at Chicago, Ill;
               d. George Edgar Stanton, b. Dec., 9, 1844, at Ossining, N. Y.; merchant; lives at Lake Forest, Ill.; mar., at Frankfort am Main, Germany, Helene Ernst, b. there Jan., 7, 1850, dau., of Julius F. and Sophia (Hartman) Ernst. He was U. S. Consul at Bristol, England, 1870-75; at Bremen, Germany, 1875-81, and U. S. Consul General at St. Petersburgh, in 1885. Children:-
                    ii. Edna Stanton, b. June 10, 1871; mar., Prof. Albert A. Michelson, and had a child:- bb. Madeline Michelson, b. Aug., 31, 1902;

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                 ii-ii. Geo. Edgar Stanton, b. Mch., 30, 1884.
               e. Gerald Napier Stanton, b. Sept., 4, 1846; d. in 1897; mar., Elizabeth Harper Belcher, dau., of Dr. Elisha Belcher, of N. Y. City. Children:-
                        i-i-i. Grace Stanton, b. in 1872;
                      ii-ii-ii. (a son) - prob. deceased;
                    iii-iii-iii. Elizabeth Stanton;
                   iv-iv-iv. Gerald Napier Stanton, Jr., mar., Margaret Downing.
                f. Augusta Hendriques Stanton, b. Oct., 4, 1855; died aged 10 months.
        iii. Wm. Avery Stanton, b. July 23, 1814; mar., Hannah Robinson, of Ossining, N. Y. Children:-
                a. Eugene Stanton; mar., & lives at Buffalo, N. Y.;
                b. Ada Stanton; unm.;
                    (Both born at Ossining, N. Y.)
         iv. Harriet Agnes Stanton, b. Mch., 18, 1816; mar., Robert C. Nichols, who was b. at Brooklyn and died there Nov., 8, 1883, ae., 69 yrs. She resided at Bridgeton, N. J., in 1890. Their children were:-
                a. Julia Frances Nichols, b. July 11, 1838; unm., and resided at Norristown, Pa., in 1890;
                b. Harriet Agnes Nichols, b. June 25, 1842; mar., Charles Boardman, of Philadelphia, Pa. They had:-
                    a/i. Harriet Boardman, mar., Myron Hunt, and had:-
                          a/ii. Charles Hunt;
                          b/ii. Harriet Hunt;
                          c/ii. Hubbard Hunt.
                c. Emily Godwin Nichols, b. June 2, 1847; mar., James Walsh, but no children recorded. They lived at St. Paul, Minn.
          v. Jedediah Stanton, b. & d. Feb., 1, 1819;
         vi. Julia Frances Stanton, b. June 3, 1820; mar., Stephen William Smith, of Charlestown, Mass.; they had:-
                a. Herbert Smith;
                b. Arthur Smith;
                c. Sophia Smith;
                d. Ella Smith;
                e. Frederick W. Smith, who d. June 17, 1892; mar. 1st., Lydia Mixer, and they had:-
                    a. Frederick W. Mixer Smith;
                    mar., 2dly., ______ Ward (Fanny, Eliza W., or Mary). They had:-
                    a/i. Florence Ward Smith;
                    b/i. a dau., twin with Florence;
                    c/i. Frederick Wm. Smith.
        vii. Mary Eliza Stanton, b. Oct., 5, 1822; d. Mch., 20, 1900; unm.;

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       viii. Sophia August Stanton, b. Apr., 14, 1825; mar., Geo. Washington Lynch, at Ossining, N. Y. They resided in Steuben St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Their marriage took place Nov., 21, 1844. Children:-
                a. Evelyn A. Lynch, b. Oct., 5, 1845; mar., 1st. Jan., 25, 1864, Ronde de Milan; mar., 2d., Francisco Javier Janes. They resided in part at least at Demerara, Brazil, S. A.;
                b. Chas. Halsey Lynch, b. Oct., 29, 1847; mar., Maria Turner, who had a child:- a. Lottie, who married and had children;
                c. George Harry Lynch, b. Aug., 4, 1852; d. Dec. 13, 1861;
                d. Robert Nichols Lynch, b. Aug., 28, 1854; mar., Apr., 14, 1880, Margaret Burns; they resided at Brooklyn, N. Y.
    [Handwritten Note: Robert Comstock adopting[?] to Mrs Sophia A. S. Lynch.]
         ix. Francis Hardy Stanton, b. Sept., 21, 1827; mar., Feb., 22, 1859, Harriet Culver, but had no child.
          x. Edward Hardy Stanton, b. May 16, 1830; d. Dec., 27, 1862; mar., Martha Hart. Children:-
                a. Alice Stanton, b. in Australia;
                b. Josephine Stanton, b. in Havana, Cuba;
                c. Amelia Stanton, b. in Havana, Cuba;
                c. Clara Stanton, b. in Nassau, W. I.
         xi. Augustus Comstock Stanton, b. Nov., 12, 1832; mar., Caroline K. Brown. He made many of the family researches. Children:-
                a. Clarence Tiffany Stanton, b. Sept., 30, 1856; mar., Annie;
                b. Blanche Caroline Stanton, b. Aug., 9, 1859; mar. William Evans, and had:-
                    a/i. Caroline Evans, b. May 8, 1875;
                    b/i. Albert Shurtleff Evans, b. Jan., 27, 1880;
                c. Isabella Everson Stanton, b. Apr., 22, 1861; mar., Feb., 28, 1880, Albert T. Wells. Children:-
                    a/ii. Clarence S. Wells, b. Nov., 9, 1881;
                    b/ii. Grace Wells, b. Feb., 27, 1883.
                d. Frances Camille Stanton, b. May 17, 1864; d. Mar. 14, 18--.
    458. Richard Stanton. He was a grocer and lived in Brooklyn, N. Y., and afterwards for a short time in New Rochelle, N. Y., and later on in Stamford (Darien), Conn., where he died. His wife, Elizabeth Waterbury, dau., of Phimeas and Elizabeth (Lounsbury) Waterbury, of Stamford, Conn., was b. June 6, 1789; married Jan., 11, 1811, and died Apr., 27, 1870. He was born at Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan., 20, 1789; died Sept., 19, 1864, at Darien, Conn. His wife was the sister of Noah Waterbury, of Williamsburgh, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was known as the "Father of Williamsburgh", and who was probably one of the earliest Americans engaged in the cordage business and the founder of the large cordage business in which the Waterbury family have been so long prominent.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           16.

    460. Mary Catharine Stanton, married 1st., George Everit; married 2ndly., James Titus. Children:-
          a. Mary Agnes Everit, b. June,     1823;
          b. Eliza Everit, b. July,     1825; d. in infancy;
          c. Elizabeth Everit, b. July 1826;
          d. Jane Titus, b. Sept.,     1830; mar., John Barr, and had:-
              a/i. Agnes Barr;
              b/i. Henry Barr.
          e. James Henry Titus, b. Mch.,     1833; mar., ______ Udall;
          f. Martha Titus, b. Feb., 28, 1835; mar., June 16, 1856, Frederick Ebbetts Lockwood, b. Sept., 7, 1837, and they had:-
              i. Arthur Ingersoll Lockwood, b. Dec., 31, 1858; mar., Mary Stevens, of San Antonio, Texas;
             ii. John Barr Lockwood, b. Aug., 5, 1860; d. Jan., 1861;
            iii. Kate Lockwood, b. Oct., 14, 1861; d. Jan., 15, 1870;
            iv. Albert Lockwood, b. May 5, 1864; d. Sept., 21, 1888; mar., Nov., 28, 1883, Annie Elizabeth Bungert;
             v. Belinda Townsend Lockwood, b. May 29, 1867; d. May 29, 1867;
            vi. Jennie Kirke Lockwood, b. Jan., 5, 1870; mar., Charles G. Salter;
           vii. Frederick Ebbetts Lockwood, b. May 10, 1870; d. in infancy;
          viii. Agnes Lockwood, b. Dec., 13, 1871; d . ae., 2 1/2 yrs.;
            ix. Blanche Lockwood, b. Jan., 29, 1872; d. 1872;
             x. Frederick Ebbetts Lockwood, b. Mch., 17, 1875; mar., Margaret Pullis, of Ridgewood, N. J., and lives there.
                 The first Lockwood of this line, in this country, came from England about 1640 and settled at Stanwix, Conn., in company with ______ Hooker and ______ Stone. ( Bolton's Hist. Westchester Co., N. Y.) His descendant, Stephen Lockwood, b. in 1764, d. in 1851, married Sarah Ingersoll, of Conn., who d. Dec., 11, 1840. Their sixth child, Albert, b. Nov., 18, 1802, mar., Eliza Jane Arthur, and had for second child, Frederick Ebbetts Lockwood.
          g. Abiel [?] Titus, b. Dec., 1888.
    468. Jonathan Schoonmaker; d. Apl., 1, 1870, at Kingston, N. Y.; mar., there in 1825, Anna Maria Eaman, b. Sept., 12, 1802; d. May 9, 1891, dau., of Jacob and Elizabeth (Houghtaling) Eaman. Children:-
          i. Sabina Elizabeth Schoonmaker, b. Aug., 22, 1826; mar., Apl., 30, 1856, Lewis De Puy, b. Nov., 7, 1822; d. Oct., 5, 1887, son of John Snyder and Maria (Van Wagenen) De Puy. Children:-
              a. Anna Maria De Puy, b. Sept., 13, 1857; mar., Oct., 8, 1884, Henry Edward Allison, M. D., b. Dec., 1, 1851, at Concord, N. H., son of Wm. Henry and

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           17.

Catharine (Anderson) Allison. Up to the doctor's death, Nov., 12th., 1904, they resided at Fishkill-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., where Dr. Allison was located as the Superintendent of the State Hospital for Insane Criminals. Children:
                  i. Catharine De Puy Allison, b. Aug., 8, 1885;
                 ii. Elizabeth Shand Allison, b. Aug., 4, 1888;
                iii. Anna Allison, b. June 13, 1895;
                iv. Wm. Henry Allison, b. June 27, 1902.

    Dr. Henry E. Allison was one of the best known alienists in the State of New York and his position as Superintendent of the Matteawan State Hospital brought him in contact with many famous medico-legal cases in which he attained a high position as an expert. His early education was obtained at the public schools of Concord and at the Kimball Academy, Meriden, N. H., where he was graduated in 1871. Later in the same year he entered the classical department of Dartmouth College, from which College he graduated as the President of his class, and as an honor man.
    Shortly after graduation Dr. Allison taught for a term and later began the study of medicine at the Dartmouth Medical College where he graduated and obtained his degree of "M. D." in 1878. In the month of August of this same year he became an assistant physician at the Willard State Hospital, at Willard, Seneca County, N. Y., where he remained nearly five years when he left there and took further courses of study-post-graduate, at New York City. He then entered into general practice at Waterloo, N. Y., only however to give this up later to accept the position of First Assistant Physician at the Willard State Hospital upon the invitation of the Board of Trustees of the Hospital. He remained five years in this position and was promoted July 1, 1889, to the Superintendency of the Asylum for Insane Criminals, then located at Auburn, N. Y., the oldest institution of its kind in the World. This institution was transferred in April, 1892, to the new institution at Fishkill-on-Hudson, now known as the Matteawan State Hospital, and Dr. Allison continued its official head until his death.
    Dr. Allison was a man of rare worth and was endeared to all who knew him, not only by his sterling worth and perfect integrity, but by the many manly and truly gentle qualities that always distinguish the true gentleman. He was a hard and persistent worker, ever mindful of the best in his search for whatever would rebound to the credit or welfare of those unfortunates entrusted to him, and one whose daily life seemed to be ordered carefully in every respect. He was a man exceedingly simple in his ways and with no ostentation or pretence, but so kindly and thoughtful that to know him was an education, as all his ways were peace and the study of the comfort and welfare of those with whom he came in contact, as well as the making the most of his opportunities for enlarging the talents given him and accepting cheerfully his share of the responsibilities of this World. The State of New York, his friends and family lose in Dr. Allison an example of the highest character and truest worth. May we all be enabled to imitate such examples!

              b. Kate Eaman De Puy, b. Oct., 10, 1859; d. Jan., 15[?], 1885; mar., Mch., 26, 1884, J. Albert Merritt, b. July 1, 1856; d. Apl., 10, 1900, son of James O., & Sarah (Van Deusen) Merritt.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           18.

              c. Henry Broadhead De Puy, b. Mch., 11, 1864, lives at Pueblo, Cal.
         ii. Severyn Bruyn Schoonmaker, b. in 1827; d. Mch., 20, 1889; mar., 1st., Apl., 30, 1836[sic - 1856?], Mary Meyer; mar., 2d., in 1864, Kate Van Gaasbeck.
        iii. Wynkoop Schoonmaker, b. in Kingston, N. Y.
    476. Catharine Burhans (Wynkoop) Keese. Children:-
          i. John Wynkoop Keese, b. Apl., 1839; d. Nov., 4, 1903, leaving a widow and children:-
              a. John Mumford Keese, M. D., b. July 5, 1872, of Syracuse, N. Y.;
              b. Katharine Wynkoop Keese, b. June 8, 1880;
              c. A. Hoffman Keese, b. Apl., 7, 1884.
         ii. Henrietta Wynkoop Keese, b. June 23, 1840; mar., in 1869, Rev. John B. Drury, Editor of the Christian Intelligencer. Children:-
              a. Alfred Drury, M. D., b. Dec.,     1872, of Paterson, N. J.;
              b. Charlotte Keese Drury, b. May     1874;
              c. Francis Keese Drury, b. May     1878;
              d. Henrietta Wynkoop Drury, b. Nov.,     1882; graduated from Vassar College, 1904.
        iii. Francis S. Keese, b. Dec., 25, 1841.
    490. Leah De Witt Wynkoop; mar., Henry Harbeck Buckbee.
    638. Anna Wynkoop. Her husband was Isaac Van Cleve, or Cleur, or Cluer.
    661. John Wynkoop. His wife, Elizabeth Corbett, was born near Leatherwood, Clarion Co., Pa., and died at the house of her son, John M., near Siegle, Jefferson Co., Pa. They had the following children:-
          a. Candace; mar., Matross Knapp, and had four children. They lived and died in Grove City;
          b. Berthinda; mar., 1st., ______ Coleman; 2d., Samuel Eddyburn. She had eight children;
          c. Hiram; died in infancy;
          d. John Milton, b. Aug., 22, 1827, at Millstone, Forest Co., Pa.; d. Jan., 27, 1872, near Brookville, Jefferson Co., Pa.; a planter and lumber dealer; mar., Dec. 24, 1850, Harriett Anne Lorimer, b. Aug., 18, 1830, in Westmoreland Co., dau., of Benjamin Kirkpatrick and Julia Anne (Totten) Lorimer. The widow lives in Bradford Co. Children:-
              i. Clarine Melita, b. July 8, 1852; mar., Sept. 3, 1873, Rev. W. J. Barton, of Clarion Co., Pa., of the Erie Conference, M. E. Church;
             ii. Byrun Faber, b. Aug., 4, 1854; grocer at Bradford Pa.; his brother Miles with him;
            iii. Merritt Berti, b. Apl., 25, 1856; lives in Warren Co.; mar., Sept., 5, 1877, Ida M. Wadding, of Corsica, Jefferson Co.; has four children;

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           19.

             iv. Olive Markarilla, b. Apl., 10, 1858; d. Oct., 21, 1858;
              v. Elizabeth Anne, b. Jan., 28, 1860; mar., May 5, 1888, Charles Zeldom Forest, Captain of the Bradford Police; has three children;
             vi. Miles Lincoln, b. Mch., 20, 1862; mar., Clara Prunkard, of Dubois, Pa.; Miles is with his brother Byrun;
            vii. Olive Emma, b. July 30, 1864; mar., Sept., 17, 1905, Thomas Milton Moore, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and lives there;
           viii. Frederick Fair, b. Oct., 30, 1867; unm.; painter and grainer, at Bradford, Pa.
          e. Jehiel Franklin (1091 in the genealogy); b. at Millstone, 1829; lives at Minneapolis, Minn.; mar., Elizabeth Leech, b. Feb., 12, 1830, in England; d. May 19, 1902;
          f. Lyman Curtis (1090 in the genealogy); b. in 1830, near Brookville, Pa.; d. Feb., 7, 1904; mar., twice, and has seven children; lived many years in Pittsburgh, Pa.
          g. Seldon Faber; d. in childhood;
          h. Josephus Byrun; d. a child;
          i. Wm. Strickland; d. Feb., 19, 1904, at Lewiston, Idaho. He was a soldier in the Union Army, and was discharged because of ill-health. His widow lives in Lewiston. They had several children.
          j. Miles Hamilton (1092 in the genealogy); he died of diphtheria, aged 21.
    684. Catharine Wynkoop, born near Newtown, Pa.; d. at Pennington, N. J. Her husband was James Bennett McNair, M. D. They had five children, of whom only Rev. William Wynkoop McNair, reached adult age. Dr. McNair married 2d., Mary Anne King, and had by her three children.
    708. Mary Wynkoop. Her husband's name appears as George Randall.
    710. Garrett Wynkoop. He and some of his brothers and sisters all owned their shares in the estate of their father (381), to go toward the manumission, (about 1837-40), of the descendants of the slave girl, who had ridden to Virginia behind Garrett's grandmother (154).
    721. Claudine Raguet; married Silas Van Sant; children:-
          i. Mary Wirtz Vansant, b. Jan., 8, 1821; d. Oct., 21, 1890, in Philadelphia; mar., Sept., 28, 1848, George Scott, b. July 19, 1810, at Drymshannon, County Monahan, Ireland; d. Aug., 23, 1868, at New York. Children:-
              a. Mary Claudine Scott, b. Mch., 17, 1853;
              b. George Fowler Scott, b. Jan., 10, 1855;
              c. Chas. Raguet Scott, b. Feb., 19, 1860;
              d. Emma Woodruff Scott, b. Feb., 16, ----; at Steubenville, Ohio; mar., July 19, 1892, at Philadelphia, Edward Rhode Stitt, M. D., surgeon in U. S. N., b. at Charlotte, N. C., son of Wm. Edward & Mary Anne (Rhodes) Stitt.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           20.

    815. Jonathan Hasbrouck Stanton, b. Nov., 21, 1813; d. Aug., 14, 1890; mar., 1st., Oct., 10, 1836, Lydia Hussey Macy, b. Nov., 27, 1815; d. Dec., 29, 1899; mar., 2nd., July 13, 1844, Elizabeth Warner, of New York, dau., of Cristian H. and Lydia (Nesbitt) Warner, previously of Prince Edward Island, but at the time of their daughter's marriage of Brooklyn, N. Y. Children by 1st., marriage were given in the Genealogy. Children by the 2nd., marriage were:-
       i. Lawrence Waterbury Stanton, b. at N. Y. City, April 4, 1845; d. unm., at Brooklyn, N. Y.;
      ii. Henry Stanton, b. Dec., 10, 1847, at N. Y. City; mar., at Ossining, N. Y., Aug., 31, 1868, Elizabeth Jean Auld, dau., of J. Blakeney and Elizabeth M. (Bruce) Auld, who was born at N. Y. City, April 24, 1849. Their children were:-
              a. Julia Waterbury Stanton, b. at Brooklyn, N. Y., May 23, 1870;
              b. Francis Auld Stanton, b. May 4, 1872; d. June 20, 1872;
              c. Nina Bruce Stanton, b. Mar. 23, 1874; mar., at Roslyn, N. Y., Arthur L. C. Macconnell, son of John and Margaret (MacDonald) Macconnell;
              d. Henry Stanton, b. Mar., 21, 1877; d. May 23, 1878;
              e. Florence Auld Stanton, b. Feb., 26, 1879; d. Jan., 16, 1882;
              f. Cecelia Joseph Stanton, b. Oct., 16, 1881;
              g. Jean Paul Stanton, b. Sept., 18, 1883;
              h. Frances Marguerita Stanton, b. Oct., 26, 1886, at Plainfield, N. J.;
              i. Elizabeth Virginia Lee Stanton, b. Nov., 11, 1888; b. at Plainfield, and died there Aug., 7, 1889;
              j. Mary Bruce Stanton, b. June 25, 1893, at Roslyn, Long Island, N. Y.
              All before Frances Marguerita were b. at Brooklyn. The family now reside at Jamaica, L. I., N. Y.
        iii. Edwin Hasbrouck Stanton, b. Sept., 21, 1846; mar., June 13, 1877, Eliza Macdougal. Children:-
              a. E. Louise Stanton, b. Mar., 10, 1878;
              b. Henry Hasbrouck Stanton, b. Sept., 23, 1880; d. Sept., 18, 1902;
              c. Edith Stanton, b. Feb., 3, 1883; d. Dec.,     1886;
              d. Wm. Arthur Stanton            }
                  Edwain Hasbrouck Stanton } twins, b. Sept., 3, 1886, the latter died on May 17, 1887, at N. Y.;
              e. Howard A. Stanton, b. Dec., 14, 1889.
         iv. Louise Wood Stanton, b. May 31, 1849; d. unm., at Brooklyn, N. Y., May 21, 1851;
          v. Elizabeth Stanton, b. Apr., 29, 1852.
    814. Henry Stanton; b. Feb., 28, 1812; mar., Margaret M. Corlies, b. Feb., 12, 1814; d. May 25, 1875, dau., of Benjamin and Phebe (Ludlam) Corlies, of Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Children:-
          a. Sarah M. Stanton, b. Oct., 3, 1845; d. Mar., 9, 1849;
          b. Margaret C. Stanton, b. May 5, 1850; d. Dec., 15, 1900; mar., Feb., 21, 1876, Joseph I. Jackson, b. Aug., 25, 1843; d. Jan., 23, 1882, son of Joseph H. and Helen M.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           21.

(Everitt) Jackson. Jos. H. J. was b. 1809; d. 1880. His wife was b. 1814; d. 1893. They had one son:-
              a/i. B. Everitt Jackson, b. Mar., 1877; resides at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
    813. Anna Gosman Wynkoop. She died Mch., 6, 1904, at East Orange, N. J. , and Rev. Dr. Anson Du Bois, May 1, 1905.
    816. Mary Elizabeth Stanton, b. Jan., 28, 1817; mar., Joseph N. Corlies. Children:-
          a. Richard S. Corlies, b. Mch., 24, 1838; d. Apl., 28, 1839;
          b. Gerald N. Corlies, b. May 17, 1839; d. June 7, 1872; mar., Julia Irish;
          c. Emma Corlies, b. May 30, 1842;
          d. Elizabeth Corlies.
    817. James Waterbury Stanton, b. at Brooklyn, N. Y., Mar., 19, 1821; d. at Darien, Conn., July 17, 1872; mar., Louisa Wood. Children:-
          a. Adelaide; married a ______ Weed. They reside at Darien, Conn.
    819. Richard Edwin Stanton, b. at Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 30, 1825; d. at Bridgeport, Conn., Feb., 16, 1886; mar., Jan., 14, 1849, Elizabeth Mills, b. Jan., 2, 1826; d. Apr., 23, 1892, dau., of David L. and Huldah Mills. Children:-
          a. Edwin Hasbrouck Stanton, b. Nov., 16, 1854; d. May 5, 1860;
          b. Albert Nash Stanton, b. July 31, 1863; mar., June 15, 1886, Florence J. Wood, dau., of Augustus N. and Sophia Wood. He mar., 2nd., Mary Eaton. Children by 1st., marriage:-
              i. A. Dorothy, b. July 22, 1890;
             ii. B. Flora, b. July 6, 1869; d. July 17, 1889.
              There was one child by a second marriage - name unknown;
          c. Helen S., b. Aug., 29, 1865; mar., Rev. Samuel Holmes.
    820. Julia Waterbury Stanton, b. Feb., 1, 1828, at Brooklyn, N. Y.; married Andrew King (known formerly as Koenig). Children:-
          i. Elizabeth King, b. Mch., 22, 1858; mar., Oct., 19, 1891, Frank Bradbury.
         ii. Edward A. King, b. Jan., 23, 1861; mar., Apl., 15, 1891, Mary Elizabeth Rice, dau., of Wm. B. & Jerusha A. Rice. Children:-
              a. Natalie, b. Feb., 15, 1892;
              b. De Lancey, b. Dec., 22, 1893.
         iii. Clarence King, b. Aug., 24, 1864; d. ae., 1 yr. 4 mos.;
         iv. Frank Stanton King. b. Jan., 18, 1867; mar., Apl., 8, 1898, Isabelle C. Broas, dau., of Wm. H. & Alice C. (McGeorge) Broas;
          v. Herman King, b. June 28, 1872; unm.
    829. Emily Burrill Hasbrouck. Her husband, Joseph Foldger Barnard, died Jan., 6, 1904, at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., aged abt. 80. They were married in 1861. Children:-

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           22.

          i. Frederick Barnard;
         ii. Maud Barnard; mar., James Lenox Banks.
    835. Mary Jane Wynkoop. She died July 12, 1905, at Kinderhook, N. Y., unm.
    871. Mary Buckbee Wynkoop. Perhaps identical with Mary Bugbee, bp., June 30, 1841, at Hurley Church (See No. 1814.)
    873. James Davis Wynkoop; died June 1, 1904, at Hurley, N. Y. He was a member of the Holland Society, and of the Sons of American Revolution. His wife, Elizabeth Appleton, daughter of William and Jerusha (Frisbie) Appleton, was widow of Clement H. Warren, who d. July 1, 1884. They were very liberal in promoting this genealogy. Their house at Hurley, known as Wynkoop Farm was shown as a frontispiece to this genealogy.
    1089A-1092. Children of John (661), and Elizabeth (C) Wynkoop. (See 661, i-x, hereof.)
    1171. William Wynkoop McNair; b. Sept., 21, 1825, at Brownsburgh, Bucks Co., Pa; mar., 1st., May 17, 1849, Charity Dunn, who died Oct., 22, 1862; mar., 2d., Sept., 29, 1863, Jenny Shirland, dau., of John and Mary. He was graduated in 1844, at the College of New Jersey, and at Princeton Seminary in 1849; home missionary in Wisconsin for 14 years; chaplain of the 1st., N. Y. Lincoln Regiment, until the end of the Civil War; Atlantic City, 1870-72; Cedarville, N. J., 1872-75; Newark, N. J., 1875-81; Andenreid, Pa., 1881-99; conducted missionary work among the Italians of that region; representative of the Waldensian Church; Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia. Children:-
          i. Elizabeth McNair, B. Mch., 8, 1851; d. in 1885; mar., Walter F. Searing. Child:-
              a. Ernest Searing.
         ii. Virginia McNair, b. Apl., 9, 1853; mar., Apl., 20, 1882, Charles Caroll Gardner, b. Apl., 20, 1852; d. Feb., 6, 1902. The widow lives at Newark, N. J. Children:-
              a. Charles Carroll Gardner, b. Apl., 12, 1883;
              b. Raymond McNair Gardner, b. Mch., 12, 1885;
              c. Preston DeForest Gardner, b. May 20, 1889.
        iii. Mary Bennett McNair, b. May 28, 1855; mar., Howard Bateman, now deceased. Children:-
              a. Esla Bateman;
              b. Howard Bateman;
              c. Richard Bateman;
              d. Walter Bateman.
         iv. Henry Martyn McNair, b. Dec., 1857; lives in Newark, N. J.;
          v. Andrew McNair, b. July 8, 1860; lives in Newark.
    1192. Adrian Garret Wynkoop, b. in 1847; mar., Oct., 14, 1891, Mary Brooke Yates, b. in 1866, dau., of Col. Francis and Sydney V. (Rookes) Yates. Adrian was Mayor of his native place, Hedgesville, West Virginia; was admitted to the Bar in 1877; settled at Woodstock, Shenandoah Co., W. Va.; while at last named place was vestryman, trustee and treasurer of the P. E. Church, the building of which he had promoted; removed to Charles Town, W. Va., in 1890. Children:-

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           23.

          i. Sydney Virginia, b. July 13, 1892;
         ii. Adrian Garret, b. Nov., 20, 1893;
        iii. Julia Yates, b. Feb., 14, 1897;
        iv. Francis Yates, b. July 28, 1899;
         v. Brooke Lovell, b. Aug., 3, 1902.
    1194. Clara Virginia Wynkoop; mar., Apl., 1876, Rev. James Owen Dorsey, P. E. C., b. Oct., 31, 1848, in Baltimore, Md.; d. Feb., 6, 1895, in Washington, D. C. He was a Missionary to the Indians, and while so employed, had a severe throat affliction, which compelled him to give up preaching; was employed in the Bureau of Amer. Ethnology from 1879 until his death; was a member of several scientific societies and was a writer on the Indian races, languages and customs. Children:-
          i. Virginia Dorsey, b. May 8, 1877; d. on the same day;
         ii. Virginia Dorsey, b. Aug., 4, 1880; mar., June 18, 1901, James Herndon Lightfoot, attorney-at-law and Examiner of Patents. Child:-
              a. James Herndon Lightfoot, Jr., b. May 21, 1902; d. June 3. 1903. Mrs. Lightfoot is graceful with her pencil and skillful with her coloring and she gave to the compiler an emblazoned shield of Wynkoop, of Amsterdam.
    1207. Mary Beattie Steel; mar., Samuel Dawes Harvey, M. D.
    1213. Cond� Raguet. His wife probably was a Simpson.
    1214. Augusta Amelia Raguet; mar., Leonard Mortimer Thorn, who wrote his name without a terminal e.
    1215. Henry Raguet. His widow, Pamie O. Starr, married Amory Clapp.
    1216. Anna W. Raguet, b. Jan., 25, 1819; d. Nov., 7, 1883; mar., in 1840, Dr. Robert Anderson Irion.
    1218. Col. Francis Murray Wynkoop. His widow, Anna McKnight Decatur Twiggs, married 2d., W_____ F. Whitney.
    1222. Charles Shippen Wynkoop. His wife, Catharine Sinclair Carmichael, was born Dec., 21, 1833; d. Mch., 30, 1904, in Brooklyn, N. Y., at the residence of her daughter, Mai Twiggs (1604), Mrs. Wm. Wolcott Marks. She had some celebrity as an actress. Children:-
          i. Catharine (1603A), b. abt., 1856;
         ii. Mai Twiggs (1604), b. May 19, 1859.
    1242. Mary Helen Radford, known usually as Helen; d. May 15, 1905, in Philadelphia.
    1269. Stephen Gerard Wood - as he wrote his name - d. Oct., 1, 1903, in Albany.
    1292. Albert Gallatin Frye. He died Aug., 9, 1849, and his wife Sept., 26, 1894. Children:-
          i. A son;
         ii. A daughter;
        iii. Randall, b. in 1854;[sic]
        iv. Wealthie, b. in 1858.[sic]

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           24.

    1307. ii. Mary Virginia Wynkoop. She and her husband, Eugene Roscoe Moore, had a son, Don Wynkoop Moore, b. Aug., 22, 1904.
    1382. Rev., Elbert S. Porter, pastor of the Congregational Church at Stockbridge, Mass.; d. April 18, 1906. He was buried at Clavarack, N. Y.
    1396 & 1397. These numbers should be interchanged.
    1396. Lydia Stanton, b. abt., 1837; d. abt., 1845.
    1397. Josiah Henry Stanton (name was probably originally Jonathan Hasbrouck Stanton, Jr., and changed to Josiah Henry Macy, by adoption), b. Aug., 10, 1840. His wife, Jane Carpenter, dau., of Henry Mead and Rebecca Willets (Underhill) Carpenter, died June 2, 1901.
    1397A. Lawrence Waterbury Stanton; d. unm.;
    1397B. Edwin Hasbrouck Stanton - given in these notes previously.
    1397C. Henry Stanton - given previously in these notes.
    1397D. Louise Wood Stanton; d. unm.
    1397E. Elizabeth Stanton - living in 1904.
    1400. Catharine Lawrence Sharpe. Her husband, Hon. Ira Davenport, was born June 28, 1841, at Hornell, N. Y.; died Oct., 4, 1904, at his summer home, Bath, N. Y.
    1402. Anna Strong Wynkoop; mar., Sept., 15, 1906, at Utica, N. Y., Dr. George H. Torney, Jr.
    1404A. Rudolph Silvester Wynkoop, b. Sept., 26, 1893.
    1422. Wm. Henry Dunning. His wife was Eliza Abramse Bogardus.
    1423. Charles Edward Dunning. His wife was Margaret M. Petrikin.
    1428. Richard Wynkoop. The compiler. A likeness of him, taken in 1885, better than the one in the Genealogy, is here given. He has sometimes launched into the sea of verse, disregarding the dictum that a man should hold himself down to prose, if he can, and only express himself in measure when he needs a safety valve -- as Klihu did (Jcb xxxii, 18-20). Two specimens of his verse are here given, one of August, 1873, and the other of August, 1876. The humor, if it has any of the later, turns upon the meaning of Philip, namely, lover of horses. It was part of a correspondence with Cecil F. P. Bancroft, Ph. D., deceased, who was then Principal of Philips Academy, Andover, Mass., and was evoked by a catalogue of the Academy. It is somewhat amplified here,

"The Aching Heart.

Say you that yonder is a happy man?
Your view is superficial. True, he wears
A cheerful face, and has a mirthful voice;

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           25.

He's free to make or hear a droll remark;
He laughs at other's mischief, and, in turn,
Can play at pranks himself; he seems quite gay;
Shafts wound him not - his senses are so dull;
He nothing cares for censure, nor applause;
and you conclude that this is happiness?
Let's look a little closer; he but wears
A coat of mail, which turns aside the blow,
Or hides the bruise. His mirthful ways are like
A curtain to the window of his soul,
To shut out idle gazers, lest they see
The grief he hides within. They also serve
Like purpose with preservers made of cork,
Which keep above the wave the heavy weight,
The presence of the cork suggests the need
Of borrowed buoyancy; were it withdrawn,
The gravity would weigh the body down.
Or, let us take another simile;
His soul is like a siren ship, which feels
The wound, though hid from sight, and finds the need
Of extra effort to be kept afloat.
But "What's his grief?" T'is naught to you or me-
He suffers - that's enough to make us kind,
But "Who's the man of whom these things are true?"
There many such - I've shown you but the type.
To Principal Dr. Bancroft, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass.

Dear philosophic Doctor B.
    Thanks for the catalogue I see.
Now did you recommend
    A course of study, as a friend;
Or hint that I should go to school,
    To make my verse conform to rule?
Pray how, in Latin, should we call
    Your ancient academic hall?
Would Schola Philliporum do?
    Or, are the Phillipses too few?
Or, Academia Equi?
    With Hippos elevated high.
Would Hippodromia be right?
    Or would it timed mothers fright?
"Circenses", might terreatres please,
    But would it not the nantae tease?
Equaria, might not far be wrong,
    But why the troublous quest prolong,
Is the curriculum afoot?
    Or, are there bridle, spur and boot?
Does "Philip" hint the only game,
    By which her athletes rise to fame?
"Book-making" - is it their employ?
    Or, are the text books their chief joy?
Are base-ball, foot-ball, shells, tabooed,
    And only hippic honors woo'd?
Croquet, lawn-tennis, glee-clubs, all
    Seem slighted by this equine hall!
Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           26.

Andover, I would like to see
    In Latin - please regard my plea.
"Ex Super?" That amounts to nil -
    Be sober - or, at least keep still.
The local name to Latin turn'd
    My other verses shall be burn'd;
For that, indeed, I want to know -
    The rest, is merely rhythmic flow.
Richard Wynkoop

Cut No.
June 29, 1829.

    1431. Virginia Wynkoop; wife of Theodore F. Hay. She died Jan., 17, 1906, in Brooklyn, N. Y.
    1500. Rev. Asa Wynkoop; mar., Nov., 19, 1904, in the Borough of Manhattan, N. Y. City, Mary Simpson Stratton, daughter of Thomas C. Stratton.
    1580. Daniel Woodbury Wynkoop. His wife, Carlie Marie Schenck, died suddenly, Mch., 23, 1904, at San Francisco, Cal.
    1604. Mai Twiggs Wynkoop; b. May 19, 1859; mar., Oct. 2, 1883, Wm. Wolcott Marks; lives in Brooklyn, N. Y.; is an actress, under the name of Mai Estelle. Mr. Marks was born Dec., 26, 1850, son of Wm. Willoughby and Mary Elizabeth (Van der Hoef) Marks. Child:-
          i. Catharine Mai Marks.
    1621. Lansing Pruyn Wood, b. June 15, 1870; removed to the Borough of Manhattan, N. Y. City, after the death of his father, in October, 1903; he was with the Continental Tobacco Co., in April, 1904; mar., in 1892, Minerva Frances Gilchrist, dau., of Genl. Chas. A. Gilchrist. Children:-
          i. Helen Pruyn Wood, b. Oct., 27, 1897;
         ii. Emma Justina Wood, b. Nov., 19, 1899.
    1659. Wm. Austin Macy, M. D. He was graduated in 1885, at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, N. Y. City; practiced medicine at Harrison, N. Y., for a year, and then was appointed as Assistant House Physician and Surgeon to the Work House and Alms House Hospitals on Blackwell's Island, New York City; afterwards, became an assistant physician on Hart's Island. In 1887, he was detailed as an assistant physician in the womens' department for the Insane, on Blackwell's Island, where he remained about a year, and was then made acting Assistant Superintendent of the mens' department on Ward's Island, N. Y. City, being promoted to the position of Acting Superintendent of the same institution in March, 1890, and to that of full Superintendent on June 1st., 1890. He remained in that position until the close of 1896, when he was appointed by the Board of Managers of the Willard State Hospital to the position of Superintendent of that insti-

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           27.

tion, in which position he remained until he was transferred to take charge of the Long Island State Hospital at Kings Park, L. I., about June 1st, 1904, which Hospital has since changed its name under the Law, to be known as the Kings Park State Hospital.
    His younger children were:-
         vi. Alan Dent Macy, b. June 9, 1900 (See correction in name from Alan Emmet (1751));
        vii. Malcolm Dunbar Macy, b. Aug., 26, 1902 (1751A);
       viii. A daughter not named; d. in child-birth, June 19, 1904, (1751B).
    1662. Augusta Macy; mar., Apl. 30, 1904, at New York City, Chas. Sturgis Phinney, son of Franklin S. and Margaret S. (Macy) Phinney. Margaret S. Phinney was the daughter of Charles A. and Sarah L. (Corlies) Macy. Child:-
          i. Margaret, b. July 13, 1906.
    1664. Carleton Macy; mar., Dec., 11, 1900, Helen Lefferts, b. Oct., 7, 1873, dau., of Oscar and Louisa A. (Hubbard) Lefferts.
    1668. Emma Cordelia Shear. She and her husband, George W. Hough, LL. D. live at Evanston, Ill. Children:-
          i. George Jacob Hough;
         ii. Harriet Hough; deceased;
        iii. William Hough.
    1670. Harriet Juliet Shear; lives at Albany, N. Y. Her husband, Emile Cardozi (?), died Sept., 25, 1879, in New York City. Children:-
          i. Isabel Henrietta Cardozi, b. June 13, 1870, at Albany, N. Y.; mar., Jan., 7, 1898, Sheldon Burwell Shaw, Jr., known upon the stage as "Brinsley" Shaw. She obtained a divorce, Jan., 18, 1906.
         ii. Grace Louise Cardozi, b. Jan., 6, 1874;
        iii. Frederick Theodore Cardozi, b. Aug., 30, 1875, at Eastchester, Westchester Co., N. Y.;
        iv. Henry Emile Cardozi, b. Dec., 2, 1879; mar., Apl., 5, 1898, Augusta Marion Frost, of Albany.
    1671. Theodore Robert Shear, and his wife, Mary Louise Quackenbos, live at the Borough of Manhattan, N. Y. City. He is a descendant of Sylvanus Shear who migrated from Holland about 17__, and settled at Rome, N. Y., where he engaged in planting. Theodore was educated in the school of George Wrightson, Albany, and at Union College, where he was graduated an A. B., in 1868, and from which College he received the degree of A. M., in 1871. He traveled extensively in Europe for about a year and then entered the Albany Law School, from which he was graduated as LL. B., in 1870. He began practice in New York City with John H. Hill, and after a short time he became managing clerk for the law firm of Low, Smith & Watkins, and later, he served in the same capacity with Anderson, Young & Smith, until 1875, after which he practiced alone. In 1881 he became associated with Wilson M. Powell, in the real estate branch of the law, and remained with him until

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           28.

1897, when he resumed the practice of law alone. He is a member of the New York State Bar Association, the Riverside Republican Club, of New York City; the Union College Alumni Association of New York, and of the Alpha Delta Phi College fraternity.

(Likeness)

    1672. Josephine Sarah Shear. She married George Maynard Dorrance. They live at Sandy Spring, Md. Children:-
          i. Bessie Dorrance; mar. Geo. Van Nest Johnson; lives in Manhattan, N. Y. City;
         ii. George Maynard Dorrance, b. Apl., 2, 1876; mar., Jane Evans; lives in Manhattan, N. Y. City;
        iii. Nellie Dorrance; d. ae., abt. 1 year;
        iv. Bartelle Trumbull Dorrance.
    1674. Kate Maud Shear; mar. Charles B. Clover or Cloner; lives in Manhattan, N. Y. City. Children:-
          i. Edyth Mai Clover;
         ii. Charles Wynkoop Clover; d. s. p.;
        iii. Kittie Clover.
    1687. Herbert [sic] Schurman Wynkoop, b. Sept., 20, 1866; son of the compiler. He is an Electrical Engineer in charge of the Bureau of Electricity and Gas, Brooklyn. He is commissary of the 23rd, Regiment, N. S. N. Y., with the rank of Captain. His likeness is given herein.

Hubert Schurrman Wynkoop

(Cut)

    1692. Charles Hitchcock Sherrill, b. Apr., 13, 1867. He was prominent in athletic exercises. In 1892 he entered the law office of Carter & Ledyard, and was admitted to the Bar in December of that year. On January 1, 1897, he became a member of the firm of Carmalt, Sherrill & Lockwood, which became Sherrill & Lockwood a year later, and was dissolved, July 1, 1900. He was active in the Republican campaigns of 1896, 1900 and 1904, and was the representative of the Lawyers' Sound Money Club in the Committee of Five, which organized the parades of 1896 and 1900. On January 1, 1901, he was appointed Captain, Aide-de-camp, on the Staff of governor Odell, and was made Lieut. Col., April 20, 1903, and became Colonel on the Staff of Governor Higgins, January 1, 1905. He is a member of the Union League, University, Yale, N. Y. Athletic and Lincoln Clubs, and of the Societies of the Sons of the Revolution, and the War of 1812. He is descended from a Sherrill, who settled at Northampton, L. I., in 1674, of a family named after a parish near Barnstaple, Devonshire, England. He married, February 6, 1906, at Manhattan, N. Y. City, Georgie Barker Gibbs, daughter of Edward N. Gibbs.
    1796. Evert Wynkoop and Mary Newkirk's marriage bond was dated Oct. 17, 1765.
    1814. Mary Buckbee Wynkoop seems to be identical with No. 871.

Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy.                           29.

Index to the Supplement. Wynkoop Surnames.

Wincop, John, Rev., Dr. p Wynkoop, Hubert S. 1687 Wincopp, John, Gent. Jr. " Jas. Davis 873 Wynkoop, Adrien 63 " Jehiel F. (iv) 661 " Adrien, Maj. 64A " Johannes 60 " Adrian G. 1192 " John 661 " " " (ii) 1192 " John C. 205 " Adrian 154 " John Milton (iv) 661 " Anne 638 " Jon G. 809 " Anna G. 813 " Josephus B. (viii) 661 " Anna S. 209 " Judith 57 " Anna Strong 1402 " Julia Y. (iii) 1192 " Asa, Rev. 1500 " Leah 62 & 64 " Augustus 213 " " D. W. 490 " Benjamin 8 " Lyman C. (f.) 661 " Benjamin 53 " Mai Twiggs 1604 " Bertha S. 1702 " Maria 67 " Berthinda (b.) 661 " " 206 " (Book-plate) " " H. 394 " Brooke L. (v) 1192 " Mary 708 " Byrun F. (d, ii) 661 " " B. 871 " Candace (a) 661 " " B. 1814 " Catharina 61 " " J. 835 " Catharine 106 " " V. (ii) 1307 " " 207 " Merritt B. (d, iii) 1661 " " 684 " Miles (661, j) 1092 " Clara V. 1194 " " H. (j) 661 " Clarine M. (d, i) 661 " " L. (d, vi) 661 " Cornelia 59 " Nile F. 780[?] " Cornelius 1 " Olive E. (d, vii) 661 " " 9 " " M. (d, v) 661 " " (9) p " Petrus 66 " " 209A " Phebe 174 " " C. 65 " Richard (compiler) 1428 " " " 211 " Rudolph S. 1404A " " D., Col. 94 " Seldon F. (g) 661 " " E., Maj. 295 " (Shield) (p) " " E., Maj.(under) 94 " Sydney V. (i) 1192 " Curtis (661, vi) 1090 " Tobias, Capt. 40 " Daniel W. 1580 " Virginia 1431 " Derrick W. 13 " Wm. S. (i) 661 " Dirck, Judge 292 " Elizabeth 58 " " 210 " " A. (d, v) 661 " Evert, Capt 112 " " 1796 " Francis (661, e) 1091 " Francis M., Col. 1218 " Francis Y. (iv) 1192 " Frederick F.(d, viii) 661 " Garret 710 " George P. 208 " Henrietta 212 " Hiram (c) 661 Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy. 30.

Surnames other than Wynkoop

Allison, Henry E (i,a) 468 Corlies, Gerald N. (b) 816 Appleton, Elizabeth 873 " Joseph N 816 Ariens, Wyntje 18 " Margaret M. 814 Arthur, Augusta (ii) 457 Davenport, Ira 1400 Auld, Elizabeth J. 815 Davies, Esther 206 Avery, Sophia 457 De Milan, Ronde (viii,a) 457 Banks, Jas. L. (ii) 829 Denniston, Elizabeth 300 Barnard, Joseph F. 829 De Puy, Anna M. (i,a) 468 " Maud (ii) 829 " Henry B. (i,c) 468 Barton, W. J., Rev. (d,i) 661 " Kate E. (i,b) 468 Bateman, Howard (iii) 1171 " Lewis (i) 468 Beattie, John (note) 300 De Ronde, Nicholas 65 Beekman, Mary 81 & 117 Dorrance, Bartelle (iv) 1672 " Stephen D.(vi) 300 " Bessie (i) 1672 Belcher, Eliz. H. (ii,e) 457 " George M. 1672 Bimpe, Maria M. 65 " " " (ii) 1672 Blanck, Agnes 206 " Nellie (iii) 1672 " Mary 206 Dorsey, Jas. O., Rev. 1194 Boardman, Chas. (iv,j) 357 " Virginia (i) 1194 B�mper see Bimpe 65 " " (ii) 1194 Bogardus, Eliza A. 1422 Downing, Margaret(e,iv-iv-iv) 457 Bradbury, Frank (i) 820 Drury, John B. (ii) 476 Brink, Benj. Meyer 332 Du Bois, Anson, Rev. Dr. 813 " Cornelius P. 332 Dunn, Charity 1171 Broas, Isabella C. (iv) 820 Dunning, Chas. E. 1423 Brown, Caroline K. (xi) 457 " William H. 1422 Bruyn, Catharine 207 Du Puis, Maria 18 Buckbee, Henry H. 490 " Nicholas 18 Bushnell, Drayton W. 18 Eaman, Anna M. 468 Cardoze, Emile 1670 Eaton, Mary (b) 819 " Fred T. (iii) 1670 Eddyburn, Samuel (b) 661 " Grace L. (ii) 1670 Ernst, Helene (ii,d) 457 " Henry E. (iv) 1670 Evans, Jane (ii) 1672 " Isabella H. (i) 1670 Evans, William (xi,b) 457 Carmichael, Catharine S. 1222 Everit, George 460 Carpenter, Jane (hereof) 1397 Clapp, Amory 1215 Floyd, Anna (iii) 300 Clinton, Cath. (i) 300 Forest, Chas. E. (d,v) 661 " Charles 300 Frye, Albert G. 1292 " Christiana (note) 300 " Randall (iii) 1292 " Cornelia T. (ii) 300 " Wealthia (iv) 1292 " Elizabeth (iv) 300 " Geo. Genl. 300 Gardner, Chas. C. (ii) 1171 " Geo. W. (iii) 300 Gasherie, Joseph 106 " Harriet (ix) 300 Genet, Edmond C. (ii) 300 " Jas. Col. (note) 300 Gibbs, Geo. B. 1692 " Maria (vi) 300 Gilchrist, Minerva F. 1621 " Martha W. (v) 300 " Family of (note) 300 Hardin, Edwin D., Rev. 1702 Clover, Charles B. 1674 Hart, Martha (x) 457 " " W. (ii) 1674 Harvey, Samuel D. 1207 " Edythe M. (i) 1674 Hasbrouck, Emily B. 829 " Kittie (iii) 1674 " Jonathan, Capt. 207 Cole, Margriet 12 Holmes, Samuel, Rev. (c) 819 Coleman, Mr. (b) 661 Hough, Geo. J. (i) 1668 Corbett, Elizabeth 661 " Geo. W. 1668 Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy. 31. Hough, Harriet (ii) 1668 Newkirk, Hendrika 9 " William (iii) 1668 " Mary 1796 Irion, Robert A., Dr. 1216 Nichols, Robt. C (iv) 457 Irish, Julia (b) 816 Jackson, Joseph (b) 814 Janes, Francisco J. (viii,a) 457 Pardee, Lucius C. (ii,b) 457 Johnson, Geo. V. N. (i) 1672 Petrikin, Margaret M. 1423 Jackson, Joseph H. (i) 814 Petterson, George 65 Johnson, Wirts (i) 394 Phinney, Chas. S. 1662 " Franklin S. 1662 Keese, Henrietta W. (ii) 476 " Margaret S. (Macy) 1662 " John W. (i) 476 Prunkard, Clara (d,vi) 661 Kern, Johann M., Rev. 65 Knapp, Matross (a) 661 Quick, Miss. 1397B King, Andrew 820 Redford, Mary Helen 1292 " Edw. A. (ii) 820 Raguet, Anna W. 1216 " Elizabeth (i) 820 " Augusta A. 1214 " Frank S. (iv) 820 " Claudine 721 " Herman (v) 820 " Cond� 1213 Koenig, Andrew see King 820 " Henry 1215 Randall, George 708 Leech, Elizabeth (e) 661 Renard, Caterina 18 Lefferts, Helen 1664 Rhodes, Mary A. (i,d) 721 " James (ii) 394 Rice, Mary E. (ii) 820 Levernich, Patience 206 King, Mary A. 684 " Wm., Rev. 206 Robinson, Hannah (iii) 457 Lightfoot, Jas. H. (ii) 1194 Ross, Samuel (ii) 394 Lockwood, Fred E. (f) 460 Ruehl, Anna S. 65 " Family of (f,i) 460 " Gustav Martin 65 Lorimer, Harriet A. (d) 661 " Maria Catharina 65 Lounsbury, John 94 Ruhl see Ruehl, Roel & Ruehle Lynch, Geo. W. (viii) 457 etc., see Ruehl for all Schenck, Carlie M. 1580 McNair, Andrew D. (v) 1171 Schoonmaker, Deborah 209 " Elizabeth (i) 1171 " Hendrick 209 " Henry N. (iv) 1171 " Henry H. 209 " Jas. B., M.D. 684 " Hezekiah 209 " Mary B. (iii) 1171 " Jonathan 468 " Virginia (ii) 1171 " Sabina E. (i) 468 " Wm. W., Rev. 1171 " Severyn B. (ii) 468 Macy, Augusta 1662 " Wynkoop (iii) 468 " Carleton 1664 " Family of (note) 209 " Josiah H. (hereof) 1397 Scott, Emma W. (i,d) 721 " Lydia H. 815 " George (i) 721 " Wm. Austin, M.D., 206 Searing, Walter F. (i) 1171 " " " " 1659 Sharpe, Catharine W. 1400 Marks, Cath. Mai (i) 1604 Shear, Emma C. 1668 " Wm. W. 1604 " Harriet J. 1670 Michelson, Albert A. (d,ii) 457 " Josephine S. 1672 " Kate M. 1674 " Theodore R. 1671 Middleton, Mary 174 Morse, Dorothy 206 de Milan, Ronde (viii,a) 457 Meyer, Benjamin 332 Mills, Elizabeth 819 " Louisa 332 Moore, Don W. (ii) 1307 Meyer, Rachel 332 " Eugene R. (ii) 1307 Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy. 32. Sherrill, Charles H. 1692 Stanton, Jedediah (v) 457 Smith, Fred W. (vi,e) 457 " Jonathan Hasbrouck 815 " Stephen Wm. (vi) 457 " " " Jr. 1397 Stanton, Ada (iii,b) 457 " Josiah H. (hereof) 1397 " Adelaide W. (a) 817 " Josephine (x,b) 457 " Agnes (ii,b) 457 " Julia F. (ii,c) 457 " Albert N. (b) 819 " " " (vi) 457 " Alice (x,a) 457 " Julia W. 820 " Amelia (x,c) 457 " Lawrence Waterbury 1397A " Augusta H. (ii,f) 457 " Louisa W. 1397D " Augustus C. (xi) 457 " Lydia (hereof) 1396 " Blanche C. (xi,b) 457 " Margaret (b) 814 " Clara (x,d) 457 " Mary 206 " Clarence T. (xi,a) 457 " Mary C. 450 " Edna (ii,d,ii) 457 " Mary E. (vii) 457 " Edw. H. (x) 457 " Mary E. 816 " Edwin Hasbrouck 1397B " Richard 458 "Elizabeth(ii,e,iii-iii-iii) 457 " Richard E. 819 " Elizabeth 1397E " Sophia A. (viii) 457 " Eugene (iii,a) 457 " Wm. A. (iii) 457 " Frances C. (xi,d) 457 Starr, Pamie O. 1215 " Francis H. (ix) 457 Steel, Mary B. 1207 " George 206 Stitt, Edw. R., M.D. (i,d) 721 " " 206 Stratton, Mary S. 1500 " " (of Jamaica, LI) 206 Swart, Cornelius 117 " Geo. E. (ii) 457 Silvester, Lydia 205 " Geo. E. (ii,d) 457 " Geo. E.(ii,d,ii-ii) 457 Tallmadge, Matthias B. (iv) 300 " Geo. H. (under) 65 Tappen, Cornelia 300 " Geo. H. 457 Taylor, John (i) 300 " Gerald N. (ii,e) 457 Thorn, Leonard, N. 1814 " " "(ii,e,iv-iv-iv) 457 Titus, James 460 " Grace (ii,e,i-i-i) 457 Titus, Martha (vi) 460 " Harriet A. (iv) 457 Torney, Geo. H., Jr., M.D. 1402 " Helen (c) 819 Twiggs, Anna Mc K. D. 1218 " Henry 206 " " 206 Van Cleve, Isaac 658 " " 814 Van Cortlandt, Pierre (i) 300 " " 822 Van Gaasbeck, Kate (ii) 468 " " 1397C Vansant, Mary W. (i) 721 " " Augustus (i) 457 " Silas 721 " Isabella, E.(xi,c) 457 Van Solingen, Henry, Dr. 212 " James W. 817 Vining, Benjamin, Capt. 174 " John, Judge 174 " " 425 " Mary 424 Wadding, Ida M. (d,iii) 661 Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy. 33. Walsh, James (iv, c) 457 Warner, Elizabeth 815 Warner, Maria 206 Warren, Clement H. 873 Waterbury, Elizabeth 458 Wells, Albert T. (xi,c) 457 Wirts, Margaretta (ii) 394 " Sarah (i) 394 " Wynkoop 394 Wittiker, Hannah 209 Wood, Florence J. (b) 819 " Lansing P. 1621 " Louisa 817 " Stephen G. 1269 Yates, Mary Brooke 1192 Supplement to the Wynkoop Genealogy. 34. Calendered paper (Illustrations 2 1/2 inches wide..........5 " 3 1/2 " " ..........1 400 copies for insertion with the unbound book 100 copies trimmed down for placing in the books bound heretofore. --- These to have the imprint. Price 25 cents. 500 I think the price might better be 50 cents. W. A. M.


Source:

Title: Wynkoop Genealogy, Supplement
Stmnt.Resp.: Richard Wynkoop
Authors: Wynkoop, Richard , 1829-1913 (Main Author)

Notes: Microfilm of manuscript (typewritten copy, 34 p., made in 1906).
The Wynkoop family originally of the Netherlands settled in New York.

Subjects: Wynkoop
Format: Manuscript (On Film)
Language: English
Publication: Salt Lake City : Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah, 1942
Physical: 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.

Film Notes:
Title: Wynkoop Genealogy, supplement
Authors: Wynkoop, Richard, 1829-1913 (Main Author)
Note: Wynkoop Genealogy, supplement
Location: FHL US/CAN Film
Film: 282

Picture Sources:

Wynkoop, Richard, Schuremans of New Jersey, 2d ed., New York, Knickerbocker Press, 1902.


Acknowledgements:

    I would like to thank two very special people who helped me acquire a copy of this unique document. First I would like to thank my very good friend, and Covenhoven cousin, the late Ardis Parshall. Ardis photocopied this manuscript for me on May 17th, 1999 and had the pleasure of hearing one of the guides at the Latter Day Saints Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah say that she had never seen anyone use the earliest films made by the Latter Day Saints, just as he was returning the microfilm to that cabinet. The snickers of the visitors were music to his ears. Unfortunately Ardis passed away before he could send me the photocopies. I'm going to miss you, Ardis.

    Which leads me to MaryAnn Van Ballegooie [email protected] who very graciously volunteered to recopy the manuscript for me on August 24th, 1999. MaryAnn, I couldn't have done any of this without you. I'm deeply grateful for all of your help.

    Many thanks,

    Chris

Created September 10, 1999; Revised March 9, 2007
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