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Jacobus (Jansen) van Etten (bef. 1634 - abt. 1693)

Jacobus (Jacob) van Etten formerly Jansen aka Janszn, VanEtten, van Ette
Born before in Etten, Brabant, Nederlandmap
Ancestors ancestors
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 11 Jan 1665 in Kingston, Ulster, New Yorkmap
Descendants descendants
Died about after about age 58 in Hurley, Ulster, Province of New Yorkmap
Profile last modified | Created 13 Sep 2010
This page has been accessed 3,822 times.
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Jacob (Jansen) van Etten was a New Netherland settler.
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Contents

Biography

Birth

1632 Etten, Brabant, Nederland
1632 in Noord-Brabant, Netherlands
1634 Place: Brabant,a duchy in Belgium or Noord-Brabant of the Netherlands[1]
1634 Etten, Gendringen, Gelderland, Netherlands[2]
1634 Etten, North Brabant, Netherlands
22 OCT 1634 Noord Brabant, Etten, Holland [3]

Baptism

  • Jacobus doopdatum: 22-10-1634; kerk: Etten Rooms Katholiek; vader: Joannes Marinus; moeder: Wilhelmi. Joannes; [4][5]
    Note: The line above the father's name and mother's patronymic in the record image indicates an abbreviation of the full name Joannes or Joannis (Jo-is or Jo-es = Joannis or Joannes).

Arrival

1658 New Jersey

Marriage

Jacob Jansen of Etten in Brabant, j.m., was married to Annetje Arians of Amsterdam, deserted wife of Aaert Petersen Tack, in the Reformed Dutch Church of Kingston, New York, on 11 January 1665. [6]

Children

  1. Child: Jan Jacobszen Vanetten
  2. Child: Sytia Jacobz Jansen Vanetten
  3. Child: Adrian (Arien) Vanetten
  4. Child: Petrus (Pieter) Jacobszen Vanetten
  5. Child: Petronella (Nolletje) Vanetten
  6. Child: Heiltie Vanetten
  7. Child: Emanuel Vanetten
  8. Child: Tietie (Tietje) Vanetten
  9. Child: Jacobus Jacobszen Vanetten
  10. Child: Geestie Gertrude Vanetten

Death

Hurley, Ulster, New York
Rhinebeck, Dutchess Co., NY
Kingston? [7][3][8]
1693 in Hurley, Ulster, New York

Church Records

Marriage
  • 1665 Jan 11 Jacob Jansen, j.m., of Etten, in Brabant, and Annetje Arians, of Amsterdam, deserted wife of Aaert Pietersen Tack, both resid. here. First publication of Banns, 28 Dec., 1664; second, 4 Jan.; third, 11 Jan. 1665.
Children's baptisms
  1. 1666 Jan 03 Jan, Jacob Jansen, Annetjen Ariaens. Wit.: Jan Cornelisse, Jan Tyssen, Willempje Jacobs.
  2. 1668 Mar 25 Sytje, Jacob Jansen, Annetje Adriaens. Wit.: Jan Broers, and his wife.
  3. 1670 Jun 26 Adriaen, Jacob Yansen Van Etten, Annetie Adriaens.
  4. 1679 Apr 21 Heiltie, Jacob Jansse Van Etten, Annetie Gelvins. Wit.: Jacob Jansse Decker, Gysbert Albertsse, Jannetie Craffers. Bp'd at Marbleton.
  5. 1681 Dec 29 Emanuel, Jacob Janz van Ette, Annetie Adriaandr. Wit.: Leendert Barentsz Cool, Maritie.
  6. 1684 Feb 24 Tietie, Jacob Janse van Etten, Annetie Adriaanz. Wit.: Nicolaus Antoni, Engeltie Heyndrix.
  7. 1686 May 02 Jacobus, Jacob van Etten, Annetie Ariaans. Wit.: Jan Rosa, Hillegond Willemz.
  8. 1688 Dec 25 Geesje, Jacob Jansen Van Etthe, Annetje Adriaentse Kam. Wit.: Barbara Metselaer, Jannetje. [9]

Research Notes

LNAB should be Jansen, the patronymic name that appears for him in the record of his marriage in 1665. - Smith-62120 16:47, 30 July 2019 (UTC)

Jacobus Jansen Van Etten Resource Information Ancestry Image Link (this gives names, dates, marriages - most of which is presented on this profile - and some sources for the data such as Van Eaton & Allied Families by S E Coulter, Van Etten Family by L Van Etten)
Note: Jacob came to America before 1658. He lived in Marbletown. He was a tall man with blue eyes and curly auburn hair. Also known as DeLange
Jacob Jansen Van Etten was born the year the Dutch first settled Nieuw Amsterdam. Jacob arrived in Nieuw Amsterdam in 1658 from Etten, N. Brabant, Holland. There are two earlier generations recorded in the church there. He married Annetje Arlans in 1664 in what is now Manhattan. Her father was a very wealthy man, and an elder in the old Dutch church in Kingston, New York. They had many children, the eldest of which was Jan Van Etten (1666 to ? ).
From page 10 in "Van Eaton & Allied Familes" by Steven Earl Coulter:
...Jacob Jansen, born in 1632, and baptised October 22, 1634 at Etten, eight miles from Breda, Holland.
Jacob Jansen came to America in 1658 or earlier and settled at Esopus (later called Wiltwyck, and finally Kingston) on the Hudson River in the Dutch colony of New Netherland (now New York state). He worked as a farm hand for Aert Pietersen Tack. One record refers to Jacob as the "Head Farmer of Tack."
On June 7, 1663, Indians raided the villages of Esopus and nearby Hurley. At Esopus, Aert Pietersen Tack's home was destroyed by fire, along with 12 other houses and the church. Fifteen men, four women, and two children were killed and scalped, and 1 man, 12 women, and 30 children were carried away by the Indians. Aert Tack disappeared. He apparently deserted his wife Annetje and returned to Holland, where he reportedly had another wife. Annetje Arians was granted a divorce from Aert Piertersen Tack on August 21, 1664 at Fort Ansterdam. The court ordered Tack to come and take his punishment, but he vener returned. His two children remained in the care of his deserted wife, Annetje Arians or Adrianse. Annetje may be the Annetje Adrianse who was baptised August 29, 1645 in Amsterdam. daughter of Aerjan Janss and Grietjen Jansen.
The Baptismal Register of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York, shows that on August 14, 1660, Aart Pietersen Tack and his wife Annetje Adriaenses were present at the baptism of their son Cornelius. It also lists in August 1663, the baptism of Grietjen, daughter of Aart Pietersen Tack and Grietjen Vooght; Jacob Jansen, witness. Greitjen Vooght was probably Annetje Arians, recorded under another name -- perhaps Annetje's mother was listed by mistake. In the records of baptisms of Annetje's children by her 2nd marriage, to Jacob Jansen, her name is variously spelled Ariaens, Adriaens, Gelvins, Adriaandr, Ariaans, Adriaanz, and Adriaentse Kam.
The old Dutch court records of Kingston show that in October 1663, "Jacob Jansen de lange (the long)" was fined 75 guilders for harvesting without permission and a convoy -- armed guards for protection against hostile Indians. "Defendant admits that he harvested without permision and a convoy, and says he does not intend to pay for doing so." On January 21, 1664, the following note was handed to the minister, Hermanus Blom: "Whereas, on the evening of January 2, last, Paulus Cornelisen, Jacob Jansen, alias long Jacob, Cornelis Brantsen Vos, and Ariaaen Huybertsen, came to an agreement with the Provisional Schout (presiding officer of the court) to pay for the violations committed by them, the sum of one humdred and seventy guilders, in seewan (sewan -- wampum), of which eight guilders are for costs, leaving one hundred and sixty-two guilders, one-third whereof is due to the Church, your Reverence will also receive thereby two schepels of wheat, besides seven schepels of wheat last week, making in all nine schepels of wheat, reckoned at six guilders per schepel (an old Dutch unit of dry measure equal to about 3/4 bushel), forwarded on account of the Church at Wildwyck, being the legal one-third of one hundred and sixty-two guilders."
Mattheus Capito (Provisonal Schout)
After Aert Pietersen Tack's disappearance, the court sold his property to satisfy his creditors. Jacob Jansen presented a claim for "338 guilders heavy money in wheat", which was allowed on October 21, 1664. But before the final settlement of the estate, Jacob Jansen prosecuted another claim and married Tack's widow. The Marriage Register of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston records: "Jacob Jansen, young man of Etten, in Brabant, and Annetje Arians, of Amsterdam, deserted wife of Aaert Pietersen Tack, both residing here (in Wiltwyck, name changed to Kingston in 1667)." First publication of marriage banns, December 28, 1664; second, January 4; third January 11, 1665. This was only a few months after the English had conquered the Dutch New Netherland and renamed it New York.
The new English government required the adoption of surnames to distinguish one Dutchman from another of the same name. At that time there were three Jacob Jansens in Wiltwyck. Our Jacob assumed the name of his birthplace and became Jacob Jansen von Etter. "Von" means from; leter it became Anglicised to Van and thus the family acquired the name Van Etten. Later, some branches spelled it Van Eaton or Vaneaton; others shortened it to Eaton; and some changed it to Van Atta. Jacob Jansen first appears in the records as "Van Etten" in 1670 when his son Adrian was baptised.
In 1676, Jacob Jansen Van Etten signed a petition to Governor Andros for his assistance in procuring a minister for Esopus "That can preache both Inglish and Duche." Jacob also signed the petition for control of local affairs on January 26, 1684, which so angered the Governor Thomas Donger that all signers were arrested and fined. In 1689 Jacob took the oath of allegiance to England. He died about 1693 and is supposed to be buried at Hurley, Ulster County, New York. He was survived by his wife and 9 or 10 children.
Children of Jacob Jansen Van Etten and Annetje Arians, all baptised in the Dutch Reformed Church:
1. Jan Van Etten, bpt January 3, 1666.
2. Sytie Van Etten, bpt March 25, 1668; m. April 23, 1685, Jan Everts
Terwillinger
3. Arien "Adrian" Van Etten, bpt June 26, 1670; d. 1702/3 m. Catharina Crom
4. Pieter Van Etten, m. October 12, 1697, Eva de Hooges
5. Petronella, thought to be a twin to Pieter; m.. June 21, 1696, Aldert Roosa
6. Heiltje Van Etten, bpt April 21, 1679; m. November 21, 1699, William Van
Vredenburg
7. Emanuel Van Etten, bpt December 29, 1681; m. May 10, 1702, Antje de
Hooges
8. Tietje Van Etten, bpt Feburary 24, 1684; m. May 10 1702, Evert Roosa
9. Jacobus Van Etten, bpt May 2, 1686; m. 1710, Rebecca Roosa
10. Geeseje Van Etten, bpt December 25, 1688; m. November 25, 1704, Jacob
Decker Jr.

______________________________________ __________________________________________

Jacob Jansen VAN ETTEN was born in 1632 in Noord Brabant, Etten, Holland. He was christened on 22 Oct 1634 in Noord Brabant, Etten, Holland. He died about 1693 in Hurley, Ulster Co. NY. Jacob came to America before 1658. He lived in Marbletown. Parents: John Marinssen Adriense VAN ETTEN and Wilhelmina HOANNES.
He was married to Annetje ARIENS on 11 Jan 1665 in Kingston, Ulster Co. NY.
Information in this document is taken from page 73, which documents the relationship between Annetje Adrians (Arians) and her first husband Aert Tach (Tack)
THE NEW YORK GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF AMERICAN GENEALOGY AND BIOGRAPHY. ISSUED QUARTERLY.

VOLUME LIII, 1922. PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICCAL SOCIETY 226 West 58th Street, New York.

JACOB JANSEN VAN ETTEN ALSO KNOWN AS JACOB JANSEN DE LANGE.
CONTRIBUTED BY DR. IRWIN HOCH DE LONG,
523 West James Street, Lancaster, Pa.
1. "Jansen, Jacob, 1662. Also called De Lange, 1663, and Long Jacob." (Ibid. page 124).
2. "Stol, Jacob Jansen, signed compact May 31, 1658; died 1663." (Ibid. page 128). According to the Kingston Church records (ed, Hoes, page 499) the widow of a Jacob Janse Stol married Aart Martensen Doorn, Dec. 18, 1661. If we have to do here with one individual, then there must be some error in the date of death, as given by Versteeg.
3· "Stoutenburgh [variants: Stoutenborch; Stoutenburg. See Oppenheim, 1.c.], Jacob Jansen, 1662. Marritie Hansen was mentioned as the wife of one Jacob Jansen in 1670-" (Year Book of the Holland Society of New York 1897, page 128).
4- Van Etten, Jacob Jansen, 1664." (Ibid, page 130).
Number 1 and Number 4 are apparently. the same individual, as pointed out above, a fact which was not observed by Dingman Versteeg nor has it been observed by anyone else hitherto, as far as known to me.
If now we turn to the Baptismal and Marriage Registers of The Old Dutch Church of Kingston, New York, 1660-1809, transcribed, edited and published by Roswell Randall Hoes, New York, 1891, we find the following interesting marriage record: "Jacob Jansen, j. m. of Etten, in Brabant, and Annetje Arians, of Amsterdam, deserted wife of Aert Pietersen Tack,* both reside here (in Wiltwyck, now Kingston]. First publication of Banns, 28 Dec., 1664; second, 4 Jan.; third, 11 Jan. 1665." (l.c., page 501).
That the Jacob Jansen, mentioned in the marriage record, is the same in­dividual as Jacob Jansen, mentioned in the foregoing court records, is clear. That "of Etten” is not meant to be understood as the family name "van Etten" is also clear, because the letters j.m., which are the initials of the Dutch words for "young man", precede it, while otherwise they would follow it, that is they would follow "of Etten," Note the "of Amsterdam" after the bride's name.
The words "young man" after the names of the grooms in these Dutch marriage records and the words "young daughter" after the names of the brides do not necessarily mean that the contracting parties were young, but that they had never before been married. These words are not written out in full; only the initials are written or printed. In the case of the first, the initials. in the Dutch, are j.m., while in the case of the second they are j.d.
If the Jacob Jansen in question brought an inherited family surname along with him from Holland to New 'York, it is more likely to have been De Lange than Van Etten, the latter would not be likely to become a family name so long as he still lived in Etten, Holland, though it would be likely to become such after he had come to New York and settled in the Hudson Valley. If then De Lange is his family name, it did not originate with him and of course likewise it did not originate in this country. Which of the two names. De Lange or Van Et­ten, maintained itself among his descendants in this country is not clear, though the following compilation of baptisms of his children would seem to betray a tendency in his own life time in favor of Van Etten:
According to the same records, pages 1 and 3. on August 14,1661, Aart Pietersen Tack and Annetje Adriansen (sic) had a son baptized, naming him Cornelis. In August (the day of the month is torn away), 1663. Aart Pietersen Tack and Grietjen Vooght had a daughter baptized. naming her Grietjen. The witnesses were Jacob Jansen and Barber Andries. These two records in connection with the above would seem to shed some light on the question as to what became of Aart Pietersen Tack, whose property was sold, apparently in his absence, and whose wife, Annetje Arians, is said, in the record of her marriage to Jacob Jansen, to have been deserted by him. Jacob Jansen, one of the witnesses at the second baptism, would seem to be none other Jacob Jansen De Lange, -i.e. Jacob Jansen van Etten. For further information concerning Tack. see especia1ly pages 156-7 in Oppenheim's translation of the court records, also the index under "Tack.”

Jacobus was born about 1634. in Etten, Noord Brabant (North Brabant Province), Holland. He was baptized on the 22nd of Oct 1634 by his parents Johannes Marinuszen Adriaensen and Wilhelmina Hoannes.

Jacob Jansen came to America in 1658 or earlier and settled at Esopus (later called Wiltwyck, and finally Kingston in 1667) on the Hudson River in the Dutch colony of New Netherland (now New York state). He worked as a farm hand for Aert Pietersen Tack. One record refers to Jacob as the "Head Farmer of Tack."

After Aert Pietersen Tack, his boss abandoned his wife, Annetje Arians and the Courts of New York and granted Annetje a divorce on the grounds that her husband had abandoned her and had committed bigamy, Jacobus Janszn Van Etten married Tack's wife on the 11 January 1665 at the Old Kingston Dutch Reformed Church, in Kingston, New York.

Together Jacobus and Annetje had several children and the Old Dutch Reformed Church Records each of their Baptisms and Marriages. Here is a list of some of those Children:

  • 1. Jan Jacobszen Van Etten (1666 - ) Baptized 3 January, 1666 m. Jannetije Ariense Roosa
  • 2. Sytje Van Etten (1668 - ) Baptized 25 March 1668, m. Jan Evertz Terwilliger
  • 3. Adriaen/Arian "Ari" Van Etten (1670 - ) Baptized 26 June 1670, m. Catherine Crom
  • 4. Pieter Jacobsen Van Etten (1673 - ), Baptized _ _?, m. Eva de Hooges
  • 5. Pieternella Van Etten (1675 - ), Baptized_ _ ?, m. Allert/Aldert Ariense Roosa
  • 6. Heyltje Van Etten (1679 - ) Baptized 21 April 1679, m. Willem Van Vreedenburg
  • 7. Emanuel Van Etten (1681 - ) Baptized 29 December, 1681, m. Antje de Hooges
  • 8. Tietje Van Etten (1684 - ) Baptized 24 Feb 1684, m. Evert Ariense Roosa
  • 9. Jacobus Jacobszen Van Etten (1686 - ) Baptized 2 May, 1686, m. Rebekka Jansze Roosa
  • 10. Geestje (Gertrude) Van Etten (1688 - ) Baptized 25 Dec 1688, m. Jacob Jacobse Decker

Of the above sons, Jan and Arien resided and died in Ulster county. Pieter and Jacobus removed to Dutchess county about the year 1720-1721. Emanuel moved to Warren county, New Jersey, about the year 1715.

He passed away in 1690.

Sources

  1. Rootsweb file: by Lori Luke, data base: gemini
  2. Ancestry Family Trees
  3. 3.0 3.1 Gedcom File, Title: Marinus Van Etten Descendants, Submitter: G. Wayne Dow, P.O. Box 3232, Walnut Creek, CA 94598-0232 Date: July 2002
  4. "Netherlands, Noord-Brabant, Church Records, 1473-1965," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1951-31043-9177-33?cc=2037960 : 22 August 2014), Rooms Katholiek > Etten-Leur > Dopen 1594-1724 Trouwen 1594-1599, 1667-1713 > image 190 of 635; Nederlands Rijksarchiefdienst, Den Haag (Netherlands National Archives, The Hague). left page, top entry
  5. Gouverneur, Frans C.M. Aert Pieterszn Tack. Published by the author, Velletriweg 24, 4731 DN Oudenbosch, The Netherlands. Accessed at Ancestry.com, 6 February 2015. Gouverneur, p. 5
  6. Hoes, Roswell Randall. Baptismal and marriage registers of the old Dutch church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York. New York: De Vinne Press, 1891. page 501.
  7. GenForum Date: 01/16/00, www.tznet.com/devine
  8. Ancestry Profile
  9. Roswell Randall Hoes. Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York: (formerly Named Wiltwyck, and Often Familiarly Called Esopus or 'Sopus), for One Hundred and Fifty Years from Their Commencement in 1660. New York: De Vinne Press, 1891.
  • Chester, Chris. "The Brouwer Genealogy Database." freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~brouwergenealogydata. Accessed May 23, 2016. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~brouwergenealogydata/index.htm Jacob Jansen van Etten
  • NJGS. "Van Atten, Van Etten: Van Etten, Jacob Jansen." njgsbc.org. Accessed 13 Jun 2016. http://dutchgenie.net/GSBC-familyfiles/familyfiles/g1/p1038.htm#i27378 PDF
  • U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970 about Jacobus Jansen Van Etten Name:Jacobus Jansen VanEtten
  • DAR Membership: 82142, Birth Date:1632,Birth Place: Holland,Death Date:1693, Death Place:Hurley, New York,Spouse:Jannetje Adrians, Children:Jan Van Etten
  • Northwestern NJ A>V>D> Honeyman Lewis Pub Co. Vol.4 pg. 291
  • NY Gen. & Biog. Society Collections, Vol V.
  • Snell's History of Sussex and Warren Counties
  • Delaware Township, Pike Co., Tax records, 1858-1875.
  • D.A.R. lineage Books, Vol 36, pg. 337; vol.48, Pg 154;Vol. 62, pg.94
  • Kip/Kipp Family of New Amsterdam: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=edwkipp8&id=I2531, citing Jacobus Jansen Van Etten. Some Ten Generations in America of Jacobus Jansen Van Etten - Immigrant, from Etten, North Brabant, Holland to Kingston, New York, about 1663. Compiler Eva Alice Scott. Youngstown, Ohio. 1950
  • U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Jacob Jansen VanEtten. BOYER, CARL, 3RD, editor Ship Passenger Lists, New York and New Jersey (1600-1825). Newhall, CA: the editor, 1978. 333p. 4th pr. 1986. Reprint. Family Line Publications, Westminster, MD, 1992. Page.226 publication code 714.
  • U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 about Jacobus Jansen Van Etten
  • Scott, Eva Alice. Jacobus Jansen Van Etten: Some Ten Generations in America of Jacobus Jansen Van Etten - Immigrant from Etten, North Brabant, Holland to Kingston, New York About 1663. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Edwards Brothers, Inc. 1950.
  • Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Trees cited: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/12167402/person/1310272929/facts and https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/12167402/person/1169342973/facts and sueleinweber Family Tree, 2 NOV 2008

Acknowledgments

1634 Baptism Record - The Emigrant Jacobus Janszen Van Etten's Baptismal record reads in Latin as Follows: "22 octobris 1634 baptisatus est Jacobus filius Jois Marini et Wilhelme Jois uxois eius. Susceptores Marinus Jois et Adriana Jacobi." It Reads in English: "22 Oct 1634 is baptised Jacobus son of Joanes (son of Marinus and of Wilhelmina (daughter of) Jacobus. In this record 'Jois' is an abbreviation and the genetive of the Jo[h]annes (in the original a line above the word Jois).

  • Place Baptized: Catholic church at St. Lambertus in Etten, Netherlands

1664 Court Records - Records of the New Amsterdam Council - Aert Pietersen Tack, p.17 Petition for Divorce: Date 21 August 1664 - Book: Aert Pietersen Tack Court Records by Tyler Holman, p. 17, See uploaded page and May also be viewed at this Website:https://archive.org/stream/AertPietersenTackCourtRecords/TackCourtRecords#page/n15/mode/2up

1664 Book: Olde Ulster: An Historical and Genealogical Magazine, Volume 7 By Benjamin Myer Brink, pages 207-212, Book Website: https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=jO0pAQAAMAAJ&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA206

1665 Marriage Record - Old Kingston Dutch Reformed Church, Kingston, Ulster County, New York; No. 16, Dated: 11 January 1665

  • Bride: Annetje Arians of Amsterdam, deserted wife of Aaert Pietersen Tack
  • Groom: Jacob Jansen, j.m., of Etten in Barbant
  • Place of Residence for both: Wiltwyck, now Kingston
  • 1st Publication of Banns: 28 Dec., 1664
  • 2nd Publication of Banns: 4 Jan. 1665
  • 3rd Publication of Banns: 11 January 1665
  • Marriage Date: 11 Jan 1665
  • Place of Marriage: Old Dutch Reformed Church, Kingston, New York
  • See uploaded page

1666 - Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston : Ulster County, New York, 1660-1809, by The R.D.C. of New York, Genealogical Pub. Co, Baltimore 1980; p.5 #65. The year 1666.

  • Name of Child: Jan
  • Name of Parents: Jacob Jansen and Annetjen Ariaens
  • Witnesses: Jan Cornelisse. Jan Tyssen. Willempije Jacobs.
  • See uploaded page

1684 Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York, by Kingston, N.Y. reformed Dutch Church, Hoes, Roswell Randall, 1850-1921, Publication Dated 1891, p. 21, No. 353

  • Daughter: Tietie
  • Parents: Jacob Janse Van Etten and Annetie Adrianz
  • Date of Baptism: 24 Feb 1684
  • Place of Baptism: Kingston Old Dutch Reformed Church, at Kingston, Ulster Co., NY
  • Baptism No.: 353
  • Page No. 21
  • Witnesses: Nicholaus Antoni and Engelitie Heyndrix
  • Book Website: https://archive.org/details/baptismalmarriag00king/page/20

1686 Baptismal and marriage registers of the old Dutch church of Kingston, Ulster County, New York, Kingston, N.Y. Reformed dutch Church, Hoes, Roswell Randall, 1850-1921, Publication Date: 1891, p. 26, Baptism No. 467

  • Son: Jacobus
  • Parents: Jacob Van Etten and Annetie Ariaans
  • Witnesses: Jan Rosa and Hillegond Willemz
  • Date of Baptism: 2 May 1686
  • Place of Baptism: Kingston Old Dutch Reformed Church, at Kingston, Ulster County, New York
  • Baptism No.: 467
  • Page No.: 26
  • Book Website: https://archive.org/details/baptismalmarriag00king/page/26




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Comments: 10

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I'm planning to change the LNAB for this page to Jansen, consistent with his marriage record. In the future, see https://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Van_Etten-15 for the extensive previous history of this page.
posted by Ellen Smith
Hi,

The duplicate parents are merged so these can be merged now as well, but before the merge the LNAB needs to be corrected to the patronymic Jansen, which is the LNAB according the earliest records..

posted by Bea (Timmerman) Wijma
Van Etten-508 and Van Etten-15 appear to represent the same person because: Same birth, parents, spouse, child, death
posted by Cari (Ebert) Starosta
The content about Revolutionary War service that starts this biography is clearly about some other person than the Jacob Van Etten who was born in 1632.
posted by Ellen Smith
Van Etten-196 had as place of marriage: Dutch Reformed Church, Kingston, Ulster County, NY

Year of birth: 1634 Place of birth: Etten, Gendringen, Gelderland, Netherlands (geographically not in the vicinity of Etten, Brabant) Year of death: 1689

posted by Philip van der Walt
Van Etten-15 and VanEtten-26 appear to represent the same person because: they were in an unmerged match & the New Netherland Settlers Approval System (http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:New_Netherland_Settlers_-_Approval_System) now has them marked "Green" (NNS Category) and "Orange" (Merge Pending), indicating that the two are ready to be merged. Thanks!
posted by Liz (Noland) Shifflett
Van Etten-209 and Van Etten-15 appear to represent the same person because: they were in an unmerged match & the New Netherland Settlers Approval System (http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:New_Netherland_Settlers_-_Approval_System) now has them marked "Green" (NNS Category) and "Orange" (Merge Pending), indicating that the two are ready to be merged. Thanks!
posted by Liz (Noland) Shifflett
Van Etten-196 and Van Etten-15 appear to represent the same person because: they were in an unmerged match & the New Netherland Settlers Approval System (http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:New_Netherland_Settlers_-_Approval_System) now has them marked "Green" (NNS Category) and "Orange" (Merge Pending), indicating that the two are ready to be merged. Thanks!
posted by Liz (Noland) Shifflett
Van Etten-188 and Van Etten-15 appear to represent the same person because: they were in an unmerged match & the New Netherland Settlers Approval System (http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:New_Netherland_Settlers_-_Approval_System) now has them marked "Green" (NNS Category) and "Orange" (Merge Pending), indicating that the two are ready to be merged. Thanks!
posted by Liz (Noland) Shifflett
Van Etten-121 and Van Etten-15 appear to represent the same person because: they were in an unmerged match & the New Netherland Settlers Approval System (http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:New_Netherland_Settlers_-_Approval_System) now has them marked "Green" (NNS Category) and "Orange" (Merge Pending), indicating that the two are ready to be merged. Thanks!
posted by Liz (Noland) Shifflett