“I say hello to Nancy and the artists. I think about the Chicano Artist Sanctuaries I am thinking of founding.”
I wrote the above two days ago. I am seeing into the future. Trump’s good squad own guns and see themselves as cowboys. He is supplying them with targets. Hippies were a favorite target of the Republican-right. We were ‘The Savage Indians’. We were hunted!
http://www.cnn.com/2017/08/26/politics/trump-arpaio/index.html
The pardon of Sheriff Joe checked so many boxes for what we know about how Trump views the world and operates that, in retrospect, it was utterly predictable.
This morning I awoke carrying a heavy load. I dreamed I was in a warehouse in New York choosing old props from a play that had failed, or, was never fully produced. Something went wrong. Now, I was the savior of this play. I heard someone say;
“This is an extremely difficult project. This guy gets his big break, and he’s going for this?”
I awoke with FAILURE staring me in the face. What is the play? I lie in bed half asleep and let my intuition look for the answer. Maybe it’s a musical? I thought about my friends in New York and ‘My Big Beautiful Blue Bicycle’ and my unfinished novel ‘The Gideon Computer’. I say hello to Nancy and the artists. I think about the Chicano Artist Sanctuaries I am thinking of founding. Then, I am looking at my next post I had in mind, and – BINGO!
In lest than an hour I am watching Darian Halsprin walking into a hole in the rocks where there is a waterfall in a grotto. it leads to a house designed by the famous architect – as a prop, that is going to be blown-up!
This movie was made in 1970, the year Rena and I went camping for fifty days in my 1950 Dodge. When Christine saw the painting I did of my muse in 1971, she took up art. Life imitates art. Life is a movie. Consider the real estate deal going on in the house.
Angela Davis is in this movie. My daughter’s mother had a son by a Black Panther, who knew Angela. It’s all here. It wrote itself, as if there is a God, and, Art is God.
Jon Presco
Copyright 2017
At the end of director Michelangelo Antonioni’s anti-capitalist, anti-life turkey of a film ‘Zabriskie Point,’ this house — designed by architect Paolo Soleri and (like several scenes in Antonioni’s film) based on the house in Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘North by Northwest,’ which was itself inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright’s desert houses — this house is ‘lovingly’ exploded in montage as the ‘climax’ of the film; destroyed in balletic slow motion with “a final destructive glee.”
As a director, Antonioni was for sure an accomplished artist. His films were honest demonstrations — of essentially anti-life themes. Antonioni’s original ending to this film, which was the perfect culmination of his film’s theme, was a shot of an airplane sky-writing the phrase “Fuck You, America,” which was cut by MGM president Louis F. Polk.
Never doubt that’s what he meant this replacement scene to say — “a series of slow-motion captures of capitalistic debris flying apart against a smoky blue background.” Never doubt that he meant it.
That’s why the house needed to be so good. Understand that, and you understand much of modern art. Think about it.
And from the siting of the house you can begin to appreciate what it means to “integrate architecture with your site.”
Christian Brevoort Zabriskie (October 16, 1864 – February 8, 1936) was an American businessman and former vice president of Pacific Coast Borax Company. Zabriskie Point on the northeasternmost flank of the Black Mountains east of Death Valley, located in Death Valley National Park is named after him.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXsbQr6JBN8&feature=youtu.be
https://www.geni.com/people/Maria-Zabriskie/6000000039296808002
Maria Zabriskie (Brevoort) |
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Birthdate: | April 10, 1779 (82) |
Birthplace: | New Barbadoes, Bergen County, New Jersey |
Death: | December 22, 1861 (82) Hackensack, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States |
Immediate Family: | Daughter of Elias Brevoort and Maria Brevoort Wife of Jacob Christian Zabriskie Mother of Dr. Christian Brevoort Zabriskie; Elias Brevoort Zabriskie; Henry Brevoort Zabriskie; Maria Stoutenburgh Solomon and Col. James Cannon Zabriskie |
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Managed by: | Michael M.van Beuren © |
https://www.geni.com/people/Elias-Brevoort/6000000039296201987
About Elias Brevoort
Seems to have started as a Loyalist <see list. Not to be confused with another Elias Brevoort now on the DAR list and served under Major Goetchius (NJ) ref: DAR# A104082 . His younger brother Henry remained “loyal” in the Out Ward of New York and preserved the family farm just north of Washington Square.
One Elias Brevoort was granted land in Digby, NS as a Loyalist refugee. Evidently, he returned to the US just as many other refugees did.
Petition to the Crown
Restore the City and County to his Majesty’s Protection and Peace
list of signers
https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7251084
https://www.geni.com/people/Elias-Brevoort/6000000039296201987
https://www.geni.com/people/Abraham-La-Matre/6000000003796724177
Abraham De La Matre |
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Birthdate: | before March 29, 1693 |
Birthplace: | New York? |
Death: | December 8, 1771 New Haerlem, New York? |
Immediate Family: | Son of Isaac Delamater, le Maister and Cornelia Evertse Delameter Husband of Catrina Benson Father of Catherine Brevoort Brother of Hester Van Ness, (Wife #2); Evertje Verveelen; John Delamater; Isaac Delamater, Jr.; Rebecca Delamater and 4 others; Jacob Delamater; Cornelia Delamater; Susannah Waldron and Hendrick Delamater « less |
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https://www.geni.com/people/Claude-Le-Maistre/6000000006444541052
Descendants of Claude Le Maitre
Generation No. 1
1. CLAUDE LE1 MAITRE was born Abt. 1610 in Richebourg, Province of
Artois, France, and died 1683 in Flatbush, Kings County, New Amsterdam.
He married (1) JEAN DE LANNOY in prob. Artois, France. She died Bef.
1650. He married (2) HESTER DUBOIS1,2 April 24, 1652 in
Loverdwarsstraet, Amsterdam, Holland, daughter of PIERRE DUBOIS and
CATHARINE CLARISWELL. She was born October 01, 1625 in Canterbury,
County of Kent, England, and died Abt. 1710 in New York.
Notes for CLAUDE LE MAITRE:
> From a researcher Thomas Hulse (?) of Williamston, MA Feb. 1995 : The
Delamaters were once the de la Maistres, the Lords of Garlaye, whose
chateau
lay in the parish of Derval, in the Diocese of Nantes. A branch ended up
in
Picardy (the next province over from Artois) where one Claude de la
Maistre,
Sieur de Hedicourt, fought nobly in the Protestant cause in 1588 and
1597. He
was very probably, through a younger son, our Claude Delamter’s
grandfather.
That unknown younger son lived in Richebourg, in Artois, and there
Claude was
born. He was also raised there as well as fleeing from that place
probably to
England first. By 1652, he was living in Loyerswarsstraet (the Tanner’s
cross
street) in Amsterdam and married Hester du Bois whose family had
followed a
similiar trail. By 1661, they were in Nieuw Amsterdam, first moving to
Flat
Bush and then to Harlem. Of his children, eldest son, Jan, married Ruth
Waldron founding the main branch of the Harlem Delamaters.
> From Carl Krogh citing resources of NEH&G Volume 14; NYGB&R Vol. 44;
Riker’s
History of Haarlem and UCGS Chart by Florence Prehn :
Sometimes called Isaac Delamater or Claude Le Maitre, he was a Huguenot
from
Richeborg, Artois, born there in 1620. In 1652, he came to Flatbush,
Long
Island. In 1662 he moved to Haarlem. Claude was a carpentar.
Notes for HESTER DUBOIS:
The du Bois name is from Neustria – the western part of the Frankish
Merovingian kingdom, comprising what is now northern France – formed AD
561. The name is traced to the time of Rollo : [AD 860 -931] a Norse
Chieftan and the first Duke of Normandy.
Merovingian : the first dynasty of Frankish kings that ruled over Gaul
from AD 500 to 751. [FRANK : member of a Germanic tribe of the Rhine
region; especially one of the Salian Franks who conquered Gaul (modern
France/Belgium) in 500 AD].
Jean Du Bois, her uncle; Jean Desmuille, widow of Pierre duBois, the
grandmother, and Esther Pierquin were her baptismal sponsors. She was
baptised in Strangers Chapel in Canterbury. Canterbury is located in the
County of Kent, northwest of Calais,
France and laying southeast of London.
On April 15, 1670, she and her husband made out their joint will. It
reads :
” In the year of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ 1670, the 15th of
April
appeared before me, Jan La Montagne, Junior admitted Secretary of this
Town by
the Honorable Mayor’s Court residing within the jurisdiction of New
Harlaem.
Glaude Le Maistre and Hester Du Bois, husband and wife of sound memory
and
understanding as externally appears : and of mind to make a disposition
of
their temporal estate. First, on resting in the Lord, they commit their
bodies
to decent burial and 50 guilders in seawant (wampum, the most commonly
used
currency at the time) to the poor in this place. Secondly, they annul
all
testaments and codicils that before this were made and declare this
mutual
testament to their final will. One of them having deceased, the survivor
is to
continue in full possession till again.”
More About HESTER DUBOIS:
Baptism: October 09, 1625, Canterbury, County of Kent, England
Occupation: Esther
Children of CLAUDE MAITRE and JEAN DE LANNOY are:
i.CLAUDE LE2 MAITRE.
More About CLAUDE LE MAITRE:
Baptism: November 01, 1635, Canterbury, England
ii.MARIE LE MAITRE, b. March 06, 1629/30, Canterbury, Engalnd.
More About MARIE LE MAITRE:
Baptism: Daniel Marliere, Philipe & Barbe Wibout
iii.PIERRE LE MAITRE, b. February 08, 1631/32.
More About PIERRE LE MAITRE:
Baptism: February 17, 1631/32, Canterbury, England
iv.MARY LE MAITRE, b. May 11, 1643, Canterbury, England.
Children of CLAUDE MAITRE and HESTER DUBOIS are:
v.JAN2 DELAMATER, b. 1653, Kings County, New Amsterdam; d. March
1701/02, Haarlem, Kings County, New York; m. RUTH WALDRON, August 11,
1678, Haarlem, New Amsterdam; b. April 12, 1657, Haarlem, Kings County,
New Amsterdam.
More About JAN DELAMATER:
Baptism: March 09, 1652/53, Kings County, New Amsterdam
Occupation: John
More About RUTH WALDRON:
Baptism: May 10, 1657, Haarlem, Kings County, New Amsterdam
vi.ABRAHAM DELAMATER, b. 1656, Flatbush, Kings County, New Amsterdam;
d. November 20, 1734, Kingston, Ulster County, New York; m. (1) SELETJE
(CELESTE) VERNOOY, Kingston, Ulster County, New York; b. March 1664/65,
Esopus, Ulster County, New York; d. Bef. 1719, Kingston, Ulster County,
New York; m. (2) ELSJE TAPPEN, Abt. 1693, Kingston, Ulster County, New
York; b. Albany, Albany County, New York; d. February 03, 1735/36,
Kingston, Ulster County, New York.
Notes for ABRAHAM DELAMATER:
Other researchers : Dalenen Holling 763 Mackinew Ave. Cheboygan, MI
49721
and Darlene Johnson 22325 S. Main St. Carson, CA 90745 .
Were children 3 & 4 his by second marriage ?
More About ABRAHAM DELAMATER:
Baptism: 1656, Flatbush, Kings County, New Amsterdam
Burial: November 22, 1734
Notes for SELETJE (CELESTE) VERNOOY:
Jan Van Osterhout and Hendrickje Cornelis were her baptismal sponsors.
More About SELETJE (CELESTE) VERNOOY:
Baptism: March 22, 1664/65, Kingston, Ulster County, New York
Notes for ELSJE TAPPEN:
Her marriage record to Le Sueur per Hoes 89.
More About ELSJE TAPPEN:
Burial: February 06, 1735/36, Kingston, Ulster County, New York
vii.ISAAC DELAMATER, b. 1658, Flatbush, Kings County, New YOrk; d.
1726, New York; m. CORNELIA EVERTS VAN NESS, Abt. 1681, New York; b.
?Albany, New York; d. New York.
viii.SUSANNA DELAMATER, b. Abt. 1660, Flatbush, Kings County, New
YOrk.
Notes for SUSANNA DELAMATER:
She married on Feb. 24, 1673 to Arent Hermanse Bussing.
ix.HESTER DELAMATER, b. 1662, Haarlem, Kings County, New York; m.
MOSES DE GRAFF3, New York; b. Abt. 1658, Netherlands.
Notes for MOSES DE GRAFF:
1994 researcher : Arthur Stone 21240 Torries Rd. Saucier, MS 39574
Anjou Probate Records ii, page 51 list another lineage : see message
under JAN
He married first maria Le Blanck and probably had 2 children with her.
More About MOSES DE GRAFF:
Baptism: March 13, 1660/61, Middleburg, Zeeland, Netherlands
x.JACOBUS DELAMATER, b. 1665, Harlem, Long Island, New Amsterdam; d.
1741, Marbletown, Ulster County, New York; m. GERTRUDE MARTISSEN
YSSELSTEYN, September 23, 1688, Kingston, Ulster County, New York; b.
Abt. 1666, Claverack, Columbia County, New York; d. Ulster County, New
York;.
Notes for JACOBUS DELAMATER:
He had farms at Marbletown and Claverack. Moved to Esopus with brother
Abraham
. See Probate Records II by Anjou page 125 for will.
Jacobus settled on 296 acres at Marbletown. His will reads, “….my dear
wife
Gertie all the estate during her widowhood. If she remarried she is to
have a
3rd part of the income of my rel estate and a negro woman Dian……”
His will was proved June 3, 1741 at Claverack,Columbia County, New York.
More About JACOBUS DELAMATER:
Burial: Marbletown, Ulster County, New York
Notes for GERTRUDE MARTISSEN YSSELSTEYN:
There were 2 Gertrude Ysselsteyns.
Her birthdate has not been verified. Her family was the pioneer settlers
of
the Shawangunk area of Ulster County. Gertrude was widowed early, but
held
large tracks of land in the town of Shawangunk. One knowll still retains
the
name “Gertrude’s Nose”.

Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre |
|
Also Known As: | “Claude De La Maistre”, “Claude Delamater”, “Claude La Maitre”, “Claude Delamatier”, “Claude Delameter”, “Glaude La Maitre”, “Claude de le Metre” |
Birthdate: | 1620 (63) |
Birthplace: | Richebourg, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France |
Death: | 1683 (63) Harlem, New York, New York ![]() |
Immediate Family: | Son of Guillaume Pierre Le Maistre and Mary Lemaistre Husband of Jeanne de Lannoy and Hester Mattysen Du Bois Father of Johannes Delamater, Sr.; Abraham Le Maister; Isaac Delamater, le Maister; Susannah de La Mater; Hester Delamater and 1 other; and Jacobus Le Maister « less |
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Managed by: | Private User |
Last Updated: | February 1, 2017 |
Matching family tree profiles for Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre

Claude (Cloudy) Le Maistre
Added 2015-10-27 12:17:44 -0700 by Carole (Erickson) Pomeroy,Vol. Curator
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Collection:
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Site name:
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Site manager:
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Birth:1610 – Richebourg, Artois, France
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Death:Oct 3 1683 – New Harlem, Queens, New York, United States
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Siblings:Anne Lemaitre, Claude Le Mastre, Allard Le Maistre, Jean Le Maistre, Anne Lemaître
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Wife:Hester Dubois
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Wife:Louise Le Maistre (born Hemelle)
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Wife:Jene Le Maistre (born De Lannoy)
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Wife:Mary Le Maistre (born Unkown)
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Son:Issac Le Maitre

Claude le Maistre
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Collection:
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Birth:Circa 1620 – Richebourg, Artois, France
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Death:1683 – Harlem, Province of New York, British America
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Parents:Guillaume le Maistre, Mary Le Maistre
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Wife:Hester du Bois, Jeanne DeLannoy, Louise Quennell
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Children:Johannes de La Maistre, Isaac Delamater, Susannah Delamater, Abraham Delamater, Hester Delamater, Jacobus Delamater
Immediate Family
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wife
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daughter
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daughter
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father
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mother
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About Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre
- Revised history of Harlem (city of New York). Its origin and early annals, prefaced by home scenes in the fatherlands; or, notices of its founders before emigration. Also, sketches of numerous families and the recovered history of the land-titles .. (1904)
- http://www26.us.archive.org/details/revisedhistoryof01rike
- https://archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/98/mode/1up
- Glaude Le Maistre, or Delamater, as usually written by his descendants, had sprung from an ancient house of Brittany, the Lords of Garlaye, whose chateau and estates lay in the parish of Derval, in the diocese of Nantes. It was eminent in the civil and military service, the church, and the law. Its members had held commands in Picardy, where one of its now scattered branches, in which the name Claude first appears, became allied
- https://archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/99/mode/1up
- early in the sixteenth century to the lords of Caumartin. Claude Le Maistre, Sieur De Hedicourt, becoming a Protestant, was, with others, imprisoned and fined at Amiens in 1588, at the instance of the League. He was a man of talent and spirit, and showed great valor in opposing the entrance of the Spaniards into that city in 1597, when soldiers in the garb of peasants, selling apples and nuts, had gained admission. Our Glaude Le Maistre was no doubt of this family, members of which had removed to Artois, where he was born, as before said, in the town of Richebourg. After escaping the country he comes to notice at Amsterdam, in 1652, an exile and a widower, living in the Tanners’ cross-street, having lost his wife, Jeanne De Lannoy. On April 24th of that year he married Hester, daughter of Pierre Du Bois, of Amsterdam, though late of Canterbury, England, where Hester was born. Some of the Le Maistres had also taken refuge at Canterbury, and circumstances make it nearly certain that Glaude was among them, and with the Du Boises had left England because of the civil wars then raging, or the threatened rupture with Holland, and, perhaps, in his case, to take ship for New Netherland, as he soon did, appearing with Tourneur first at Flatbush, and afterward at Harlem.
- http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/493/mode/1up
- Glaude le Maistre, born 1620, as his autograph is, ancestor of the entire Delamater family in this country, having died before the date of the Dongan patent, his widow, Hester, and sons Jan and Isaac, took his place among the patentees. An exile from his home at Richebourg, in Artois, it was while living in the Loyerdwarsstraet, at Amsterdam, April 24, 1652, that Glaude married Hester Du Bois, who was his second wife (his first wife having been Jeanne De Lannoy) , and, as we have seen, also of a French refugee family. Glaude spent some of his first years in America at Flatbush, working as a carpenter, and there four of his six children were born. With Meyndert Coerten, Walraven Luten, Pierre Billiou and others (Mrs. Billiou, a Du Bois, was probably related to Mrs. Delamater*), he applied, August 22, 1661,
- * Pierre Billiou …. etc.
- http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/494/mode/1up
- …. He died in or about 1683, his years having exceeded three-score and ten.
- Glaude Delamater, or Le Maistre, as he was then called, married first, Jeanne De Lannoy, and second Hester Du Bois, April 24, 1652, had six children, and died about 1683. On November 6, 1687, Claude’s widow married Jan Tibout, the parish clerk. In view of this event, she and Tibout had entered into an agreement, September 23, preceding, with her sons Jan and Isaac, and son-in-law Bussing (who together took the real estate, having power to do so from the absent heirs, Abraham and Jacobus Delamater, and Moses Le Count), by which she was to “have the free use of the house and erf at the strand,” while she lived, and Jan and Isaac were to pay her twenty-seven schepels of wheat yearly. “Should any land be drawn during Hester du Bois’ lifetime, it shall belong to them both, to wit, Jan Tibout and Hester Du Bois.”
- GLAUDE, BY SECOND WIFE, HAD ISSUE:
- 2. Jan, born in 1653, baptized March 9, 1653, married Ruth, daughter of Resolved Waldron, August 11, 1678, had nine children, and died 1702.
- 3. Abraham Delamater, born at Flatbush, in 1656, removed in his early manhood, with his brother Jacobus, to Kingston, Ulster County, N. Y. He there married, June 18, 1682, Celeste, daughter of Cornelius Vernoy, and had four children. He married a second wife, Elsie, daughter of Jurian Tappan, and widow of Hillebrant Lechier, about 1692, having five children. A magistrate and
- …. etc.
- http://www26.us.archive.org/stream/revisedhistoryof01rike#page/495/mode/1up
- elder at Kingston, and prominent in public affairs, he closed a useful life November 20, 1734.
- 4. Isaac, born 1658, married Cornelia Everts (Van Ness), about 1681, had nine children.
- 5. Susannah, born 1660, married Arent Harmanse Bussing, February 24, 1673, had three children.
- 6. Hester, born 1662, married Moses Le Count, had four children. He of Kingston, N. Y.
- 7. Jacobus Delamater, born 1665, at Harlem, married at Kingston, September 23, 1688, Gertrude (born 1666), daughter of Martin Cornelisz. Ysselsteyn (Esselsteyn), of Claverack. He was a trustee of Kingston, and a firm supporter of the church there for some years, till he settled in Marbletown upon land (296 acres) bought in 1715, and where he died in 1741, leaving this property to his sons Isaac and Martin, and a farm at Claverack to his eldest son Claude. Had ten children.
- Jan Delamater (2), (son of Glaude), was, as we have seen, a worthy and useful resident. He operated considerably in lands. …. On October 25, 1702, being “sick in bed,” he made his will, giving his wife a life use of his estate. The will was proved September 9, 1703, only a few days before the widow married Henry Bogert, of Marbletown, to which place she removed with some of her children. The Hoorn’s Hook farm and other lands of Jan Delamater were sold, in 1710, to Samuel Waldron.
- JAN (2), (SON OF GLAUDE), HAD ISSUE:
- …. etc.
___________________________
- Claude Delamater
- Birth: 1630 Rouen, Departement de la Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France
- Death: unknown New Rochelle, Westchester County, New York, USA
- Claude Delamater (Lemaitre or Le Maistre or Le Maitre) and Hester Du Bois were married on April 24, 1652 in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
- Family links:
- Parents:
- Guillaume Le Maistre (1600 – ____)
- Spouse:
- Hester DuBois Delamater (1625 – 1709)*
- Children:
- Hester Delamater De Graaf (1662 – ____)*
- Burial: Unknown
- Find A Grave Memorial# 128451909
- From: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=128451909
_______________
- American Ancestry: Giving the Name and Descent in the Male Line of Americans Whose Ancestors Settled in the United States Previous to the Declaration of Independence, AD 1776, VOL. 1 by Thomas P. Hughes
- https://archive.org/details/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n33/mode/1up
- Pg.21
- DE LE MATER, JOHN ADAMS, Albany; son of Lafayette, b. 1806; son of Abraham of Chatham, N. Y., b. 1766, d. 1848 (m. 1st, Phebe Herrick, 2nd, Anetje Stone); son of Johannes of Amenia and Chatham, b. 1720, d. 1793 (m. 1752 Maria, dau. of Johannes Kip); son of Isaae of Marbletown, b. 1694, d. 1775 (m. 1717 Rebecca Delamater of Harlem), captain in French war; son of Jacobus of Kingston, b. 1665, d. 1741 (m. 1688 Gertrude Ysselsteyn of Claverack); son of CLAUDE LE MAITRE or Delamater of Rechebourg Artois, France (m. Hester, dau. of Peter Du Bois of Amsterdam, Holland), of Huguenot descent, who came to America from Holland, and settled at Flatbush, 1652-62, thence to Harlem in the State of New York. See Delamater Gen. [180]
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n36/mode/1up
- Pg.24
- DUBOIS, HIRAM and LUTHER, Albany; sons of Henry J., d. 1876 (m. Anna Elting); son of Isaac (m. Cornelia Rose) ; son of Henry P., d. 1876 (m. Anna Elting); son of Isaac (m. Rebecca Dego); son of Simon (m. Cathamitge Lefever); son of Daniel (m. Mary Lefever), his first will is written in French; son ot Isaac of New Paltz, d. 1690 (m. Mary Hasbrouck); son of LOUIS DU BOIS (m. Catharine Blanchau in France), was called Louis De Wall “the Patentee,” came to America and settled at New Paltz, New York State, a brother of Jacques Du Bois. See 201. [199]
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n37/mode/1up
- Pg.25
- DU BOIS, JAMES and JONATHAN, Albany; sons of James of Albany, b. 1810 (?), d. 1884 (m. Margaret Le Fevre); son of Jonas of New Paltz (m. Rachel Le Fevre); son of Louis (m. Catherine Broadhead); son of Jonathan (m. Elizabeth Le Fevre); son of Louis of New Paltz (m. Rachel Hasbrook); son of LOUIS DU BOIS (m. Catharine Blanchau in France); was called Louis De Wall “the Patentee,” came to America and settled at New Paltz, New York State, a brother of Jacques Du Bois. See 201. [200]
- DU BOIS, PIERRE EUGENE, Albany; son of Egbert of Bluffton, South Carolina, b. 1825 (m. 1862 Kate Hope); son of Peter K. of Pleasant Valley, Dutchess county, N. Y., b. 1796, d. 1872 (m. 1817 Sarah Lattin), justice of the peace, supervisor, memb. assembly, 1842, delegate const, convention, 1846; son of Koert of Clinton, Dutchess county, b. 1763, d. 1831 (m. 1786 Elizabeth Burroughs); capt. of militia, magistrate, memb. assembly, 1810-11 ; son of Peter of Fishkill, b. 1730, d. 1769 (m. Mary Van Voorhees); son of Jonathan of Fishkill (m. Adrietta Osterhout); son of Peter of Fishkill, b. at Leyden, Holland, 1674, d. at Fishkill, 1737 (m. 1697 Jannetje Burhans), deacon and elder of the Dutch ch.; son of JACQUES DU BOIS, a French Huguenot of Artois, France, who came from Holland to America, 1675 ; his brother Louis having emigrated some fifteen years previous. He married Pieronne Beutign at Leyden, 1663 ; on arrival in America they settled at Wiltwyck (Kingston), in the State of New York. [201]
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n161/mode/1up
- Pg.31
- DE LA MATER, EZRA DOANE of Hudson ; son of Jonas Rossman of Greenport, b. 1807, d. 1871 (m. Sarah A. Groat); son of John of Greenport, b. 1786 (m. Margaret Rossman) ; son of Dirck, b. at Claverack, d. at Greenport (m. Threyntie Osterhout); son of Claude of Claverack, b. 1692, d. 1770; son of Jacobus, b. at Harlem, N. Y., 1665, d. at Claverack, 17— (m. 1688 Gertrude Ysselstyne), trustee
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n162/mode/1up
- Pg.32
- of Kingston, N. Y.; son of CLAUDE LEMAISTRE. See 315. [313]
- DE LA MATER, HENRY of Hudson (m. Cornelia Moul), and ALBERT of Hudson (m. Albertine Sagendorph); sons of Tunis Osterhout of Greenport, b. 1807 (m. Mary Decker) ; son of Claudius of Greenport (m. ___ Elting); son of Dirck, b. at Claverack, d. at Greenport (m. Threyntie Osterhout); son of Claude of Claverack, b. 1692, d. 1770; son of Jacobus, b. at Harlem, N. Y., 1665, d. at Claverack, 17— (m. 1688 Gertrude Ysselstyne), trustee of Kingston, N. Y.; son of CLAUDE LEMAISTBE. See 315. [314]
- CLAUDE LEMAISTRE or DELAMATER (ancestor of 313, 314) of Richeburg, Artois, France (m. Hester, dau. of Pierre Du Bois at Amsterdam, Holland), of Huguenot descent, came from Holland to America and settled at Flatbush, 1652-62, thence to Harlem in the State of New York. See Delamater Gen. [315]
- DE LAMATER, LEWIS of Hudson; son of Peter, b. 1797, d. 1884 (m. 1825 Hannah, dau. of Derrick Van Dusen); son of Claudius, b. 1748, d. 1842 (m. 1778 Elizabeth Harder); son of John De Lamater, whose ancestor came from France. [316]
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n164/mode/1up
- Pg.34
- DU BOIS, JOHN COERTLAND, M. D. of Hudson, b. 1831 (m. 1869 Eva P. Kimball); son of Stephen A. of Hudson, b. 1804, d. 1869 (m. 1830 Rachel A. Schryver), director and president of National Hudson River Bank fifteen years; son of Coert, b. 1774, d- 1854 (m. 1801 Mary Thorn, b. 1778, d. 1846), member of New York assembly, 1820-21; son of Christian, b. 1746, d. 1807 (m. 1768 Helena Van Voorhis, b. 1744. d. 1826 ); son of Christian, b. 1702, d. 1787 (m. Neeltje Van Vliet), resided in the old homestead built by his father at Swartwoutville, Fishkill, N. Y.; son of Pierre of Fishkill, b. at Leyden, Holland, 1674, d. at Fishkill, 1737 (m. 1697 Jannetje Burhans of Brabant), deacon and elder of the Dutch church; son of JACQUES DU BOIS. See 348. [346]
- DU BOIS, STEPHEN AUGUSTUS of Greenport; son of Henry A. of
- https://archive.org/stream/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericans/AmericanAncestryGivingTheNameAndDescentInTheMaleLineOfAmericansWhoseAncestorsSettledInTheUnitedStatesPreviousToTheDeclarationOfIndependenceAd1776#page/n165/mode/1up
- Pg.35
- Greenport, b. 1801, d. 1879 ( m 1830 Evelina Van Deusen); son of Coert, b. 1774, d. 1854 (m. 1801 Mary Thorn, b. 1778, d. 1846), member of New York assembly, 1820-21; son of Christian, b. 1846, d. 1807 (m. Neeltje Van Vliet), resided in the old homestead built by his father at Swartwoutville, Fishkill, N. Y.; son of Pierre of Fishkill, b. at Leyden, Holland, 1674, d. at Fishkill, 1737 (m. 1697 Jannetje Burhans of Brabant), deacon and elder of Dutch church; son of JACQUES DU BOIS. See 348. [347]
- JACQUES DU BOIS (ancestor of 346, 347) (m. 1663 at Leyden, Pierronne Beutijn), a son of Chretien Du Bois, was born at Wicres, near Lille, France, 1625, and was a brother of Louis Du Bois, “the Walloon,” who emigrated to America and founded New Paltz. Jacques followed his brother to America, fifteen years later, in 1675, and settled at Wiltwyck (Kingston) in the State of New York, where he died, 1676. See Bicentenary Reunion of Descendants of Louis and Jacques Du Bois, Philadelphia, 1876. [348]
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- Genealogical Record, Volume 1 By Saint Nicholas Society of the City of New York
- https://books.google.com/books?id=gJMwAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA125&lpg=PA125&dq=isaac+delamater+1658&source=bl&ots=jFAvdMSMf3&sig=E77W5ajUPHPqm07-aUblGcPllhI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjRr-_g9sfJAhUOm4MKHWYdARoQ6AEISDAJ#v=onepage&q=delamater&f=false
- Pg.231
- Claude le Maistre sprang from an ancient house of Brittany, the Lords of Garlaye, whose chateau and estates lay in the diocese of Nantes. …. Claude le Maistre, Sieur d’Hedicourt, becoming a Protestant, was imprisoned and fined in Amiens in 1588 by the League. he was a man of Talent and spirit and showed great valor in opposing the entrance of the Spaniards into that city in 1597. Claude le Maistre, the emigrant was undoubtedly of this family, members of whom had removed to Artois, settling in Richebourg, near Lille, in Flanders, where he was born in 1610, and where he married Jeanne de Lannoy.
- The breaking out of the war between France and Spain in 1635, caused a considerable influx into England of emigrants from Picardy, Artois and Flanders. Among them was Claude le Maistre, who, after
- Pg.232
- a sojourn in Canterbury, at a later date crossed over to Holland with other Huguenot refugees, probably on account of the civil wars then raging, and we find him in 1652 an exile and widower, settled in Amsterdam, when, on April 24th of that year he married Hester, daughter of Pierre du Bois, with him a wanderer from Canterbury, where Hester was born. …. buying two allotments of land in Harlem from Daniel Tourneur, to which he removed at that time and took out a patent for them in 1668. …. He died in 1683, leaving six children by his second wife. His sons were called Delamater.
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- Genealogy of descendants of Claude Le Maitre (Delamater.) [sic] : who came from France via Holland and settled at New Netherlands, now New York, in 1652 by De La Mater, La Fayette
- https://archive.org/details/genealogyofdesce00dela
- https://archive.org/stream/genealogyofdesce00dela#page/n24/mode/1up
- CLAUDE LE MAITRE (Delamater)1, the ancestor of all who inherit the name in the United States, was a native of Richebourg, in Artois, France, and had sprung from an old family in Picardy, originally from Brittany. In relation to these ancestors, and a narrative of the motives which induced him to leave his native land, and other particulars, the reader is referred to the introduction to this volume, which will be found quite full and specific on many points. On the 24th of April, 1652, Claude married at Amsterdam, Holland, Hester, a daughter of Pierre Du Bois, of that city ; though late of Canterbury, England, where Hester was born. Du Bois, like Le Maitre and others, had been prompted by the religious intolerance of France in those times to seek that freedom abroad, which was not then secure at home. The spirit of adventure invited them across the sea.
- Claude and Hester Le Maitre came to America and made their home at Flatbush (Midwout), from 1652 till 1662 ; where four of their children, Jan, Abraham, Isaac and Susanna were born. They then removed to Harlem, where two others, Hester and Jacobus, were born.
- This became their home the remainder of their days.
- …. His death occured about 1683. Hester, his widow survived him many years. Their children were :
- 1 i Jan (John)2, b. at Flatbush, 1653 ; m. Ruth, a daughter of Resolved Waldron, and operated extensively in real estate. He d. 1702, leaving
- https://archive.org/stream/genealogyofdesce00dela#page/18/mode/1up
- an interesting family, a widow, and six sons and daughters.
- 2 ii Abraham2, b. at Flatbush, 1656 ; he removed in early manhood with his brother Jacobus to Kingston (Esopus), Ulster Co., N. Y., and in 1682, married Celeste, daughter of Cornelius Vernoye ; he afterward m. a second wife, Elsie Tappan ; he became an elder in the church and prominent in public affairs (See Appendix).
- 3 iii Isaac Le Maitre2 b. 1658 ; m., about 1681, Cornelia Evarts, of Albany ; he served the town in various offices ; his home was in Harlem, where he raised an interesting family ; their children were: i. Hester, baptised Apr. 7, 1683, at Albany, who m . Simon Van Ness of that place, but in 1716, a farmer at Newark, N. J.; ii. Evertie, b. Jan. 14, 1685, m., 1717, Bernardus Verveleen of Rockland Co., N. J.; iii. Johannes, b. Jan’y 16, 1687, m., 1714, Annetje, dau. of John Waldron ; iv. Abraham, b. March 29, 1690, m., in 1718, Catherine Benson ; v. Isaac, b. Apr. 2, 1693; did this Isaac m. Annetta Myers? accounts differ ; Abram and Isaac have been said to have been twins ; (?) vi. Rebecca, b. Nov. 25, 1696, m. Capt. Isaac De Le Maitre, of Marbletown, and Amenia, Oct. 20, 1717 ; vii. Jacob, b. Apr. 9, 1699; viii. Susanna, who m., Johannes B. Waldron ; ix. Cornelia, who m., Cornelius Quackenbos, of Harlem.
- 4 iv Susanna2, b. about 1660, at Flatbush, who was m. to Albert Hermans Bussing, by whom she had two children.
- 5 v Hester2, born at Harlem, 1662 ; who was married to Moses Le Count (De Graf) and resided at Kingston.
- 6 vi Jacobus2, (James) Le Maitre b. at Harlem about 1665 ; settled at Kingston, in 1680 ; married at that place in 1688.
- The record we furnish of four of the sons and daughters of Claude and Hester Le Maitre, is general ; that of two of them, Jacobus and Isaac, is or will be more special and furnishes the names of their children.
- https://archive.org/stream/genealogyofdesce00dela#page/19/mode/1up
- A son of Jacobus, Isaac, and a daughter of Isaac, Rebecca in intermarrying, in 1717, became the parents of a large family, of which some branches have furnished pretty full records for this volume. It will be remembered that their descendants sustain the same relation to both Jacobus and Isaac, sons of Claude Le Maitre and their descendants.
- This intermarriage of three of the sons of Isaac Le Maitre with three daughters of Johannes Kip, in 1752, and 1765; eventually occasioned the consideration of interests which have led to the accumulation of many records, which are to be preserved in this volume.
- 2 JACOBUS (JAMES) LE MAITRE2, b. at Harlem about 1665, settled at Kingston in 1680 ; married at that place in 1688, Gertrude, daughter of Martin Cornelisz Ysselsteyn, of Claverack. He was a trustee of Kingston and a firm supporter of the Dutch Reformed Church. He resided in Marbletown, upon land (296 acres) bought in 1715, where he died in 1741, leaving this property to his sons Isaac and Martin, and a farm in Claverack to his eldest son Claude. The children of Jacobus were :
- …. etc.
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Father of Hester: Claude Le Maistre b: ca 1610 in Richebourg, Artois, France. Mother: Hester Dubois b: 1625 in Canterbury, England.
Claude Le Maistre died ca 1683 in Harlem, NY. On 23 July 1664, 17 Harlem residents of both sexes had their names transferred to the register of the church at Fort Amsterdam, among those listed were "Claude le Maistre and Hester du Bois his wife." Earlier, in the 1640s, according to Riker, he "fled as a refugee to Amsterdam, probably with his [first] wife, Joanne DeLannoy. She must have died, for he married at Amsterdam on April 24, 1652, Hester DuBois. He migrated to New Netherland later that year and settled at Flatbush, L.I. He worked as a carpenter. In 1661 he applied for land on Staten Island, but removed to Harlem, N.Y. instead. He served four terms as a magistrate at Harlem between 1666 and 1673. He bought two allotments of land from Daniel Tourneur for which he took out a patent June 25, 1668. In 1675 he was chosen a deacon, but his sympathies were with the French church and service, whence arose the controversy with the town regarding the parish clerk's salary, which so disturbed his latter years. If impetuous, Claude was not incapable of generous acts when approached kindly, and his obstinacy in maintaining what he conceived to be his rights can hardly be deemed a defect in his character. He died circa 1683, his years having exceeded three score and ten. Claude DeLamater, or LeMaistre as he was then called, had issue with his second wife Hester as follows: Jan, Abraham, Isaac, Susannah, HESTER and Jacobus. (James Riker, History of Harlem, [1904], p. 493).
info from http://www.ronterpening.com/meet_ron/genealogy.html
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Claude Le Maistre was a native of Richeburg, Artois (an ancient province of France), 14 miles west of Lille. The family originated in Brittany and was allied to the Lord of Caumatin. He married Jeane DeLannoy.
He went o England and his second marriage was to Hester De Bois on April 24, 1652 at Canterbury, England. He then went to Holland and in 1652 to Flatbush, New York.
He was Magistrate of Harlem from 1666 to 1673. He was a deacon in the Dutch Church although a Hugenot and sympathetic to the French Church.
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Allternate spellings: De La Maistre, LE MAISTRE, DELAMETER, LE MAITRE
Claude Le Maistre was born in 1620 in Richeborg, France. He married Jeanne De Lannoe in 1648 in France. They left France to escape religous intolerance and went to Canterbury, England. He left England and went to Amsterdam, Holland with the goal of reaching America. It was in Amsterdam that he married his second wife, Hester Dubois, in 1652 (his first wife having died). He arrived in Flatbush, NY, in 1652.
Claude became a Deacon in the Dutch Reform Church. He died in Harlem, NY, in 1683. His children were Jan, Abraham, Isaac, Susanna, Hester and Jacobus.
http://genforum.genealogy.com/delamater/messages/112.html
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For years the streams of Huguenot emigration setting out of France and the Low Countries had been bearing to Holland, now a solitary wanderer, now a stricken family, some to abide here for a time, others seeking a passage to the New World, but destined ultimately to find at Harlem a resting-place. Coming by no general or concerted action, but only as a crisis in the affairs of each had indicated the time and the mode, it is not easy to fix the exact date of their flight, though the era has been sufficiently shown. We shall name them, as we have the Dutch colonists, in the order of their departure for New Netherland.
Claude Le Maistre, or Delamater, as usually written by his descendants, had sprung from an ancient house of Brittany, the Lords of Garlaye, whose chateau and estates lay in the parish of Derval, in the diocese of Nantes …. On April 24th of that year [1652] he married Hester, daughter of Pierre Du Bois, of Amsterdam, though late of Canterbury, England, where Hester was born. Some of the Le Maistres had also taken refuge at Canterbury, and circumstances make it nearly certain that Claude was among them, and with the Du Boises had left England because of the civil wars then raging, or the threatened rupture with Holland, and, perhaps, in his case, to take ship for New Netherland, as he soon did, appearing with Tourneur first at Flatbush, and afterward at Harlem.
…. The church members referred to were the following: … Claude le Maistre and Hester du Bois, his wife.
…. On the same date (the 8th) the court-room witnessed an unusual scene. Pierre Cresson three years before had leased his farm to Claude Delamater, and things had not gone smoothly between them. In a sharp dispute about one of the oxen, which, as appeared, had died through Delamater’s neglect, the latter called Cresson “a villain for driving away his wife.” Mrs. Cresson was spending a season at Esopus. Coming into court with his complaint, where Delamater was sitting as one of the magistrates, the usually amiable and prudent Pierre, overcome by anger, told Claude that “he ought to slap his face.” Delamater pretended forgetfulness, but remembered that plaintiff had called him names too. The court regarding both parties at fault, fined each 12 gl. and costs. Unhappily this did not end the quarrel between the Walloon and Picard.
…. The ill-feeling between [Pierre] Cresson and Delamater again showed itself when the term of three years, during which the latter had worked Cresson’s farm, was closing. The court had ordered payment for the lost ox, but one of the farm tools was found broken. On September 1st Pierre in open court demanded his tools of Delamater, who was seated on the bench with his brother magistrates. Claude answered that the broken tool was at the smith’s, being mended. The court, hearing what passed between the parties, referred them to their agreement of September 5th, 1667, but put the court charges upon Cresson. Shortly after Claude sent Pierre word by the constable to come and examine his tools. Cresson would do no such thing but again went to the court room, October 6th, and repeated his demand for the tools. Delamater now promised to send them by his son; but the court, to vindicate its injured dignity, directed Pierre to fetch the tools himself from the defendant’s house, and fined him 12 gl. and costs of suit.
…. This chapter of incidents may fitly close with a glance at the village of New Harlem as it was in the autumn of 1673 …. [L]et us first note the occupants of the principal dwellings ere we cross the threshold, to explore the humble sphere of their domestic economy …. Demarest’s neighbor, over the cross-street, is Claude Delamater, recent magistrate, testy but kind-hearted.
…. The following day Joost Van Oblinus made complaint that having sent Adrian Sammis, his wife’s brother, living with him, to pasture the cattle “upon the point over against Simeon’s land,” he had been beaten off by Claude le Maistre with a stick.* Le Maistre said that he chased the cattle from his own fence, and not from that of the point, and admitted to have struck Adrian, but not with a stick. Poor Adrian, who could not speak for himself, being “deaf, dumb, and paralytic,” had two good witnesses, Esther Tourneur and Cornelia Waldron. Esther being called in, said that Adrian coming along the fencing with the cattle, she saw that Claude had beaten him with a stick. Cornelia testified the same, and that Claude ran after them. The Court condemned Le Maistre “in an amend of 6 gl., to the behoof of the church here, with the costs hereby accruing.” He was also directed to “draw in his fence by the point of his meadow forthwith, within the time of two months, without longer delay.”
…. A summons had been issued to Claude Le Maistre, pursuant to a motion of the constable, Oblinus, passed at the July term, to the effect that the old verdict of July 12, 1677, against George Haff and Tileman Jacobs Vandcr Mycn …. Le Maistre, be confirmed, and the debt, 85 gl., collected by execution. Le Maistre not appearing, the Court proceeded in a body to his house, but found him as unwilling as ever to admit the claim, he telling them, among other things, that he had “nothing to do with the town or town books.” On this they proceeded to attach and seize three pieces of new linen, which they measured in the presence of witnesses, and found to contain 56 ells. Notice was then given by the constable, and also posted up in writing, that on Thursday, the 18th instant, Delamater’s linen, unless redeemed, would be publicly sold. But the very next day (August 5, 1682), John and Isaac Delarnater, in behalf of their father, came and recovered the linen, giving security for the debt and costs, 93 gl. 10 st. So this vexatious matter, many years pending, was finally arranged; the brothers duly met their obligation, and Claude having died, his account with the town was closed by John Delamater paying a small balance “for his mother,” October 3, 1685.
…. Claude le Maistre, born 1620. as his autograph is, ancestor of the entire Delamater family in this country, having died before the date of the Dongan patent, his widow, Hester, and sons Jan and Isaac, took his place among the patentees. An exile from his home at Richebourg, in Artois, it was while living in the Loyerdwarsstraet, at Amsterdam, April 24, 1652, that Claude married Hester Du Bois, who was his second wife (his first wife having been Jeanne De Lannoy), and, as we have seen, also of a French refugee family. Glaude spent some of his first years, in America at Flatbush, working as a carpenter, and there four of his six children were born … [Delameter] and Coerten soon came to Harlem, where Delamater served four terms as a magistrate, between 1666 and 1673. He bought two allotments of land, from Daniel Tourneur, for which he took out a patent June 25, 1668.
In 1675 he was chosen a deacon, but his sympathies were with the French church and service, whence arose the controversy with the town regarding the parish clerk’s salary, which so disturbed his latter years. If impetuous, Claude was not incapable of generous acts when approached kindly; and his obstinacy in maintaining what he conceived to be his rights can hardly be deemed a defect in his character. He died in or about 1683, his years having exceeded three-score and ten.
… CLAUDE, BY SECOND WIFE, HAD ISSUE:
2. Jan, born in 1653, baptized March 9, 1653, married Ruth, daughter of Resolved Waldron, August IT, 1678, had nine children, and died 1702.
3. Abraham Delamater, born at Flatbush, in 1656, removed in his early manhood, with his brother Jacobus, to Kingston, Ulster County, N.Y.
From James Riker’s “History of Harlem” –
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Joint will of Claude Le Maistre and Hester Du Bois, dated April 15, 1670 (http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/Dutch-Colonies/1999-11/0943155523):
In the year of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ 1670, the 15th of April appeared before me, Jan La Montagne, Junior admitted Secretary of this Town by the Honorable Mayor’s Court residing within the jurisdiction of New Harlaem. Claude Le Maistre and Hester Du Bois, husband and wife of sound memory and understanding as externally appears: and of mind to make a disposition of their temporal estate. First, on resting in the Lord, they commit their bodies to decent burial and 50 guilders in seawant [wampum, the most commonly used currency at the time] to the poor in this place. Secondly, they annul all testaments and codicils that before this were made and declare this mutual testament to their final will. One of them having deceased, the survivor is to continue in full possession till again.
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Claude Delamater — Father: Pierre; Mother: Mary
Estate of family, prior to confiscation, etc.: “Bois Vert” (check spelling). Line goes back to members of Knights of St. John of Jerusalem (later known as “Knights of Malta” ).
http://genforum.genealogy.com/delamater/messages/95.html
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See also: Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre
and Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre
and Claude Jansen van Amersfoort Le Maistre
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See information about Claude Le Maistre in James Riker’s “History of Harlem” –
Joint will of Claude Le Maistre and Hester Du Bois, dated April 15, 1670 (http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/Dutch-Colonies/1999-11/0943155523):
In the year of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ 1670, the 15th of April appeared before me, Jan La Montagne, Junior admitted Secretary of this Town by the Honorable Mayor’s Court residing within the jurisdiction of New Harlaem. Glaude Le Maistre and Hester Du Bois, husband and wife of sound memory and understanding as externally appears: and of mind to make a disposition of their temporal estate. First, on resting in the Lord, they commit their bodies to decent burial and 50 guilders in seawant [wampum, the most commonly used currency at the time] to the poor in this place. Secondly, they annul all testaments and codicils that before this were made and declare this mutual testament to their final will. One of them having deceased, the survivor is to continue in full possession till again.
- * *
Claude Delamater — Father: Pierre; Mother: Mary
Estate of family, prior to confiscation, etc.: “Bois Vert” (check spelling). Line goes back to members of Kinghts of St. John of Jerusalem (later known as “Knights of Malta” ).
Reblogged this on Rosamond Press and commented:
There is an old photo of a Borax warehouse in Eugene.