Showing posts with label Carpenter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carpenter. Show all posts

Henry Ct. Middaugh's Beneficiaries, 1836

 

Will Book B, p  312

Pike County, Pennsylvania

Estate of H Ct. Middaugh

Deceased

"And now August 20th A D 1836 Henry C Middaugh, John W Middaugh, & Lenah Middaugh make application to me Daniel E. LaBar the Register for the probate of wills and granting letters of administration in and for Pike County for the probate of the last will and testament of Henry Ct Middaugh and for letters testamentary therein and which said will is in the words following to wit …"

 


Beneficiaries:

My well beloved wife Lenah;

my son William Middaugh;

my son Cornelius Middaugh, Jun.;

my son Levi Middaugh;  

my son John Middaugh;

my son Henry Middaugh, and his son and daughters, William Middaugh, Elmira Middaugh, and Catherine Middaugh;

my daughter Catherine Little, wife of William Little;

my daughter Peggy Danneley, widow of William Danneley; (or Donnoley?)*

my daughter Peggy Wood, wife of John Wood and her daughter Charity Lambert;   

my daughter Janey Caskey, wife of Martin Caskey;

my son William to hold in trust for my daughter Sally Quick, wife of Daniel Quick;

my grandson Henry C. Middaugh (father is not named).

 

Executors:  Henry C Middaugh, John W Middaugh & Lenah Middaugh

Witnesses: Richard Eldred, M.M. Dimmick, Catherine Carpenter

Daniel E. LaBar, Register

Inventory Sept 15, 1836

Filed Sept. 20, 1836

 

The two daughters are both referred to by the anglicized nickname “Peggy” in the will.

 

* William Dowley & Ganehje Middag, bapt Henry b 1804 & Pegge b 1805 https://archive.org/details/minisinkvalleyre00vosb/page/235/mode/1up

 


        "Midaghs" 1792, Reading Howell, A Map Of The State Of Pennsylvania

 


"Most Wretchedly Spelled" ~ Variants of Maghagh-kamieck










One cannot approach the history of the Minisink region without happening upon the works of Edward Manning Ruttenber (1825-1907), a passionate amateur linguist, ethnographer, and historian. He worked throughout his life as a newspaper editor and would publish The Newburgh Gazette and Daily News.

This excerpt from Ruttenber's last book, Indian Geographical Names, serves well as an introduction to the compilation of Maghagh-kamieck variants drawn from 18th century sources which follow.





Footprints of the Red Man, Indian Geographical Names, p 223 & 224


18th Century Variants of Maghagh-kamieck

  • Deed of Conveyance Maugaukemeck, c 1700, Ulster County Clerk Archives, keyword search: Tetsoord.
  • Neighbourhood of Wagachkemeck, 1716, Tax Assessment List for the County of Ulster [present day Orange County NY].
  • Mehoccomick, 1769, Rittenhouse & Montresor, surveyors, letter to the Commissioners for settling the boundary line between the colonies of New York and New Jersey.

"The Fork or Branch at the Mouth of Mahacamack...1769"

Robert Grumet, in Manhatten to Minisink: American Indian Place Names in Greater New York and Vicinity, 2013, notes under the heading MachackemeckMechagachkamic (1649), Magagamieck (1694), and Magagkamack (recent). Royden Woodward Vosburgh's Machackemeck in Minisink Valley Reformed Dutch Church Records also appears in his work Machackemeck Gravestone Inscriptions, both published in 1913.


Maghaghkamik Church sign, 1938


Machackemech Burying Ground, Port Jervis NY





The Minisink Subscribers to the 1810 "Fifty-Three Sermons on the Heidelbergh Catechism"

The New York Public Library's rare copy of the 1810 English language translation of the Dutch edition of Fifty Three Sermons on the Heidelbergh Catechism, by the Rev. John Vanderkemp, is notable for the bound in Subscriber pages featuring a list of well-to-do patrons who underwrote the cost of publication, often in return for a discount. Typically this would be the first print run as delivered to the subscribers - subsequent runs would lack these pages further reducing the cost.  The list of subscribers, a virtual Who's Who of the Dutch Reformed Church in America in 1810, is fascinating for its helpful bracketing of community place names or congregations & heads of families in the Minisink Valley from a period when other records are scarce.  New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania tax and census records offer additional details of subscribers' residence during this time period.  

Surnames variants of the Clove, Flatbrook, Mehakkemack, Menissing, Shappanack and Walpeck families include:  Bennet, Carmer, Carpenter, Cole, Cuddebeck, Depuis, Ennes, Force, Gomar, Hoornbeek, Lambert, Little, Middagh, Neerpass, Quick, Rosencrans, Rowles, Swartwout, Titsworth, Van Aken, Van Bunschooten, Van Campen, Van Gorden, Van Neste, Van Nimwegen, Van Noy, Van Vliet, Vredenburg, Westbrook and Westfall.
















James Bennet, Mehakkemack

Wm Titsworth, Clove

Benj. Carpenter, Mehakkemack

Revd. Elias Van Bunschooten, Clove

Benj. Cuddebeck, Mehakkemack

James Van Vliet, Mehakkemack

William Cuddebeck, Mehakkemack

Joseph Van Noy, Mehakkemack

Martin Cole, Mehakkemack

Garrit Van Aken, Mehakkemack

James Carmer, Shappanack

James Van Aken, Mehakkemack

Benjamin Depuis, Menissing

Evert Van Aken, Mehakkemack

Joseph Ennes, Esq. Menissing

Joseph Van Gorden, Mehakkemack

Revd. James G. Force, Walpeck

James Van Gorden, Mehakkemack

Elias Gomar, Mehakkemack

Martin Van Gorden, Mehakkemack

Peter Gomar, Mehakkemack

Joseph Van Aken, Mehakkemack

Benj.  Hoornbeek, Mehakkemack

Daniel Vredenburg, Mehakkemack

S. Lambert,    Mehakkemack

Herman Van Nimwegen, Mehakkemack

Wm. Little,   Mehakkemack

Peter Van Neste, Esq. Flatbrook

Levi Middagh, Mehakkemack

Abm. Van Campen, Esq. Shappanack

Simon Middagh, Mehakkemack

John D. Westbrook, Menissing

David Morrow, Mehakkemack

John I Westbrook, Menissing

Jacob Quick, Mehakkemack

Severin Westbrook, Menissing

Simon Rosecrans, Shappanack

Wm Westbrook, Menissing

Wm. M. Rowles, Mehakkemack

Abm. Westfall, Menissing

Peter Swartwout, Mehakkemack

George D. Westfall, Mehakkemack


Daniel B. Westfall, Mehakkemack    

An Anonymous Minisink Stone Cutter

 
Delaware Cemetery, Dingmans Township, Pike Co PA, 1821

This anonymous artisan's work is found throughout the churchyards and burying grounds of the Minisink Valley from 1802 - 1838.  To date we have discovered no signature to identify him but the stone cutter's use of a distinctive ornament of branching leaves and similar lettering elements can be found on tombstones in all three states.

Richard Veit in New Jersey Cemeteries and Tombstones suggests researching estate records to aid in identifying stone cutters, so a bit more research is in order. Quite possibly this is the work of two stone cutters, perhaps father & son or master & apprentice.







 
Laurel Grove Cemetery, Port Jervis NY, 1820



The 1820 example for Benjamin Carpenter, at left, and that of Jane Van Etten, 1837, are located at Laurel Grove Cemetery.

Correction: Benjamin Carpenter was re-interred from the Carpenter farm burial ground.






 
 
Westcolang, Pike Co. PA 1836




The earliest marker located thus far is that of Nathan Whitlock, 1802, at the Magakamack Churchyard, Port Jervis, Orange Co NY. Additional markers bearing the ornament in this old burying ground include that of Joseph Van Noy, 1833, John Nearpass, 1834, Lydia Van Fleet, 1835.

It is possible that the Whitlock marker was carved some years later than 1802.  Viet cautions that wooden markers decayed and were often replaced by family members some years after the burial.  







Damascus, Wayne Co PA, 1837



Two examples can be found in the Damascus First Baptist churchyard  in Wayne County, PA - that of Elijah Pullis, 1837, at left, and Love Ross, 1833.

The John Ryerson marker located at the Cemetery on Bell Farm in Matamoras, Pike Co PA appears to be dated either 1811 or 1841.   








  
Montague Township, Sussex Co NJ, 1838



Perhaps the most accomplished of the tombstones to use this ornament is that of Blandinah, wife of Severyne Westbrook, in the family burial ground off the Old Mine Road in Montague Township.

Whether this stone was ordered & shipped with the lily frame pre-cut or a design element popular at the time and added by the stone cutter remains unknown. 

Numerous examples of the lily frame around a central circle exist without the added branching leaves ornament of the "Minisink Stone Cutter" during the 1830s and 1840s throughout the region.