Family Tree Maker Online
Navigation Bar

[ Home Page | First Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Last Page ]

Ancestors of Fay Perry Greene, Jr. M.D.


      58. Isaac Hardenbergh, born January 25, 1756 in New York; died 1827 in Catskill, New York. He was the son of 116. Johannes Hardenbergh, Jr. and 117. Maria LeFevre. He married 59. Rachel Graham 1781 in New York.

      59. Rachel Graham, born 1760 in unknown; died 1822.

Notes for Isaac Hardenbergh:
FROM: THE HARDENBERGH FAMILY, by Myrtle Hardenbergh Miller, 1858.
Page 63
Isaac Hardenbergh, baptized as Isack at Shawangunk Church in January of 1756, born on December 1, 1755. Died in Catskill, New York at age 66 on March 14, 1821 (from Delhi Gazette of 3/22/21)

Isaac Hardenbergh was Ensign under Capt. Jacobus Roosa, 9th Company, Southern Side of the Paltz River, 4th Regiment under Lt. Col. Johannes Hardenbergh, Jr. Later he was Second Lt. and then moved out of the beat.

He was on the road list of Hurley March 28, 1781, for three days work. The census of Hurley 1790 lists Isaac with 3 males under 16, 3 females, 4 slaves. In 1794-95 an Isaac Hardenbergh was given a license for a tavern at Woodstock, a former part of Hurley. This is likely another Isaac, although he had a child baptized at New Paltz in 1793. In 1791 he went to Roxbury, Delaware County by way of Saugerties. He built a stone house in the basement of which was the first store in Roxbury. Later he went to Catskill. A document dated March 23, 1805 lists Isaac Hardenbergh as an overseer of highways.

The homestead of Isaac Hardenbergh and Rachel Graham, according to Jared Van Wagenen, Jr., was between Prattsville and Grand Gorge in Delaware County, New York. The house stood on a little knoll on the north side of the old turnpike one and one-half miles west of Prattsville. Made of stone, this big three story house stands as plumb today as it did when it was built. To this dignified old house a wooden addition has been added in later years. Within a quarter of a mile a saw mill and a grist mill was built by the side of a little falls on the Bearkill. In 1934, 900 acres were attached to the place, much of which is mountainous and of no agricultural value. When New York City build the Gilboa reservoir prior to 1934 they took 120 acres including the fertile river "flats" which were the heart of the farm. Thus is progress. (The last paragraph was taken from "The American Agriculturist, of July 7, 1934, which shows a picture of the old house)

The son Lewis Hardenbergh lived on this homestead, followed by Lewis' son Isaac, then Isaac's daughter Agnes A. who was the last of the family to own the farm.

More About Rachel Graham:
Fact 1: of New York City
     
Children of Isaac Hardenbergh and Rachel Graham are:
  i.   Frances Hardenbergh, born April 28, 1782.
  ii.   Lewis Hardenbergh, born December 30, 1783.
  iii.   George G. Hardenbergh, born May 28, 1788.
  iv.   Elizabeth Hardenbergh, born December 7, 1789.
  29 v.   Catherine Hardenbergh, born December 30, 1793 in Albany County, NY; died June 22, 1829 in Albany County, NY; married James Burnside Wands October 18, 1813 in Albany, New York.


      60. Anthony ( Waine) Wayne, born Abt. 1745 in Derbyshire, England; died November 30, 1832 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York (Source: Presbyterian Church of New Scotland NY - Record.). He was the son of 120. ? Wayne. He married 61. Sarah Johnson.

      61. Sarah Johnson, died August 28, 1833 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York.

Notes for Anthony ( Waine) Wayne:
Settled in New Scotland, Albany Co. NY shortly after the Rev. War, according to the book, the History of Herkimer County.
=========
From: Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs, Volume IV, ed by Cuyler Reynolds, 1911:
Page 1445

The Wayne family, of New Scotland, Albany County, New Y ork, herein recorded, were planted in that county by Anthony Wayne, a grandson of Captain Anthony Wayne, the American founder. He was a cousin of General Anthony Wayne, and was of the third generation of Waynes in America, and one of the early settlers in the town of New Scotland, the date of his settlement being during, or immediately after the revolution. He was an active patriot, and did not fall one whit behind his illustrious relative in devotion to the colonial cause. New Scotland then had few inhabitants, and among the loyal ones were William McCuloock, Anthony Wayne, John Furbeck, John Wands, Robert Hilton, Albert Bradt, and the La Grance family. He married and had issue.
(See notes from this same reference on George, son of Anthony)
=========

From New Scotland Presbyterian Church Cemetery Records:

Anthony Waine, Soldier of the American Revolution, 4th regiment, Albany Militia, Land Bounty Regiment.
Died 11/30/1832, aged 87 years.
=========

1790 and 1800 Federal Census records - Anthony Waine, head of household.

More About Anthony ( Waine) Wayne:
Burial: 1832, Presbyterian Church, New Scotland, NY

More About Sarah Johnson:
Burial: 1833, Presbyterian Church, New Scotland, NY
     
Children of Anthony Wayne and Sarah Johnson are:
  i.   George ( Waine) Wayne, born December 8, 1779 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York (Source: Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs.); died May 10, 1837 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York; married Elizabeth Coughtry January 27, 1805 in Albany Co. New York; born August 17, 1783 in New York; died October 11, 1842.
  Notes for George ( Waine) Wayne:
Unless otherwise noted, the source for the names and dates and other information for George's children is:
Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs, ed. by Cuyler Reynolds, pub 1911, page 1445-1446.

Page 1445:
"George, son of Anthony was born on the home farm in New Scotland. He spent his life as a farmer of the town, prospered, and was a man of influence. "

Tombstone Inscriptions copied from the "Old Presbyterian Churchyard", New Scotland, NY, by Mrs. Katharyn Wethy Wilson (Early Settlers of New York Book):

George Wayne, May 10, 1837, 58 y

  30 ii.   James Wayne, born Abt. 1784; died September 22, 1868 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York; married Martha Ramsey Bef. 1814.


      62. John Ramsey, born Abt. 1758; died 1849 in New Scotland, Albany, NY. He married 63. Margaret Connel.

      63. Margaret Connel, born Abt. 1762; died 1850 in New Scotland, Albany, NY.

Notes for John Ramsey:
From:
Tombstone Inscriptions copied from the "Old Presbyterian Churchyard", New Scotland, NY, by Mrs. Katharyn Wethy Wilson (Early Settlers of New York Book):

Ramsey, John, Jan 31, 1849, 91 y. Revolutionary War soldier.
Ramsey, Margaret Connel, his wife, Jan 9, 1850, 88 y.
James Wayne, Sept 22, 1868, 74 y
Martha Ramsey, his wife, Nov 25, 1843, 48 y.

More About John Ramsey:
Burial: 1849, Presbyterian Church Cemetery, New Scotland, NY
     
Children of John Ramsey and Margaret Connel are:
  31 i.   Martha Ramsey, born Abt. 1795; died November 25, 1843 in New Scotland, Albany County, New York; married James Wayne Bef. 1814.
  ii.   Mary Ervin Ramsey, born 1804; died 1884 (Source: Dar Records.); married Peter Palmateer.
  Notes for Mary Ervin Ramsey:
The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution Volume 111
page 266
Mrs. Mary A. Oliver Clark.
DAR ID Number: 110857
Born in Albany, N. Y.
Wife of Henry Clark.
Descendant of John Ramsay, as follows:
1. Conrad Oliver (1829-1914) m. 1849 Jemima Palmateer (1829-1913).
2. Peter Palmateer (1805-83) m. Mary Ervin Ramsay (1804-84).
3. John Ramsay m. Margaret Connell (b. 1762).
John Ramsay (1760-1849) served as private in Captain Dietz' company, Colonel Vroman's New
York regiment. He was born in New York; died in Albany County, N. Y.



[ Home Page | First Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Last Page ]
Home | Help | About Us | Biography.com | HistoryChannel.com | Site Index | Terms of Service | PRIVACY
© 2009 Ancestry.com