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Philip Udall (abt. 1620)

Philip Udall
Born about in Englandmap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[spouse(s) unknown]
Descendants descendants
Father of
Died [date unknown] in Flushing, Great Neck, New Yorkmap
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Profile last modified | Created 9 Jul 2013
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Philip Udall was a New Netherland settler.
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Biography

Philip Udall was born about 1620 in England. He married in England. They immigrated in 1642 to Salem, Massachusetts .

In 1644, Philip became one of the patentees of Hempstead, on that island, under grant from the Dutch governor, KIEFT.

In 1645, he and sixteen others obtained the patent of Flushing from the same governor, and was among those to whom the confirmatory patent was issued by Governor Nicoll,16th February, 1666, to wit:

“John LAWRENCE, Alderman of the City of New York; Richard CORNHILL, Justice of the Peace; Charles BRIDGES, William LAWRENCE, Robert TERRY, William NOBLE, John FFOVBUSH, Elias DOUGHTY, Robert FFIELD, EDMUND FFARINGTON, John MASTON, Anthony FFIELD, Philip UDALL, Thomas STYLES, Benjamin FFIELD, William PIDGEON, John ADAMS, John HINCKMAN, Nicholas PARCELL, Tobias FFEEKS, and John BOWNE patentees for, and in behalf of themselves and their associates, the freeholders, inhabitants of the town of Flushing, their heirs, successors and assigns, forever, all that certain town in the North Riding of Yorkshire, upon Long Island, called by the name of Flushing, situate, lying and being on the north side of the said island; which said town hath a certain tract of land belonging thereto, and bounded westward, beginning at the mouth of a creek, and from thence including a certain neck of land called Tew's Neck, to run eastward as far as Matthew Garrison's Bay, from the head or middle whereof a line is to be run south-east, in length about three miles, and about two miles in breadth, as the land hath been surveyed and laid out by virtue of an order made at the general meeting held at Hempstead, in the month of March, 1665; and that there be the same latitude in breadth on the south side as on the north, to run in two direct lines southward, to the middle of the hills, to the bounds between the said towns of Flushing and Jamaica.”[1]

Sources

  1. Entered by Katharine E.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Katharine E for starting this profile. Click the Changes tab for the details of contributions by Katharine and others.





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