Kingston baptism record for Adam Jan. 22 1716, #2367 in Hoes, lists parents as Pieter Tiepel and Catrina Kroest. Witnesses were Adam Ekkert, Steven Frederik and Elisabeth Lammertden.
Adam was baptised on 22 January 1716 in Kingston Reformed Church, Kingston, Ulster County, NY. He was the son of Johann Peter Dipple and Anna Catherina Krost. Baptismal sponsors were Adam Ekkert, Steven Frederich, and Elisabeth Lammertd.[1]
Mentions Johannes Dipple; also daughter-in-law, the widow of my son George; grandson Adam Trimper, grandson Wilhelmus Eckert, son Jacob, son Solomon, daughter Catherine Trimper, daughter Rebecah, wife of Coonrade Eckert; daughter Maria, wife of Davis Pottz; daughter Leah, wife of Daniel Pouse.
Executors: son Jacob, Daniel Pottze
Signed Adam Tippel
Witnesses: Peter Martin, Charity Frelik, Abrm. Freligh
June 22, 1799"
Page: Dutchess County Will Book B
Sources
↑Baptism: The Palatine Families of New York 1710. Jones, Palatine Families of NY. Henry Z. Jones Jr.Publication Henry Z. Jones, Jr., Universal City, CA, 1985. Page: p. 161.
Dutchess Co. Tax Lists, see: E.B. O'Callaghan M.D., Documentary History of the State of New York. Dutchess Co. Ancient Docs. (Albany, NY: Weed, Parsons & Company, 1849), Page 6190.
Roberts, New York in the Revolution.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Adam by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA.
However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line.
It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Adam:
Tipple-115 and Dipple-76 appear to represent the same person because: The details are the same for these two. THE LNAB ought technically to be Tiepel, a variant hardly ever used.
I have the 1790 US Census (Tipple), a military record (Tipple) two records from the Dutch reformed church, (Tippel) a New York Genealogical Record (Tippel) and an excerpt from North America Family Histories (Tipple)
I am working backwards from Elizabeth Typpel, who married Joh Nicklaus Kremer.
My reading of his will is that with one exception he and his family are always named Dipple.
Only once, at his signature, does it say Tipple. But that's not actually Adam's signature, it was written by Gilbert Livingston, the Surrogate Judge. I've been reading Livingston's work for months now transcribing these wills, and that's Livingston's handwriting, as is the entire will.
I recommend dropping the "Tipple" from his name, unless there is another primary source that says otherwise.
I am working backwards from Elizabeth Typpel, who married Joh Nicklaus Kremer.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tipple-77
Only once, at his signature, does it say Tipple. But that's not actually Adam's signature, it was written by Gilbert Livingston, the Surrogate Judge. I've been reading Livingston's work for months now transcribing these wills, and that's Livingston's handwriting, as is the entire will.
I recommend dropping the "Tipple" from his name, unless there is another primary source that says otherwise.