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1620 - 1655 (34 years)
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Name |
Antony de Hooges |
Born |
14 Dec 1620 |
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands [1] |
Gender |
Male |
Emigration |
23 Jul 1641 |
Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands |
Immigration |
29 Nov 1641 |
New Amsterdam, Colony of New Netherland, Netherlands [2] |
Name |
Antoni de Hooges |
Died |
11 Oct 1655 |
Rensselaer, Colony of New Netherlands, Netherlands [1] |
Person ID |
I6317 |
TangledRoots |
Last Modified |
22 Oct 2021 |
Family |
Eva Albertse, b. Jan 1632/3, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands , d. 8 Oct 1689, Hurley, New York Colony, British Colonial America (Age 56 years) |
Married |
29 Oct 1647 |
Rensselaerswyck [2, 3, 4, 5] |
Last Modified |
16 Jan 2022 |
Family ID |
F2507 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
...Antony de Hooges; was engaged as underbookkeeper and assistant to Arent van Curler, and sailed from the Texel by den Coninck David, July 30, 1641. He reached New Amsterdam Nov. 29, 1641, but apparently did not arrive in the colony till April 10, 1642, being credited from that date till April 10, 1644, with a salary of f150 a year. From van Curler's departure for Holland, in Oct. 1644, till van Slichtenhorst's arrival on March 22, 1648, he was entrusted with the business management of the colony; from the latter date till his death, on or about 'Oct. 11, 1655, he held the offices of secretary and gecommitteerde. In the accounts, he is credited, from May 11, 1652, to Oct. 11, 1655, with a salary of f300 a year as secretary, and for the same period with a salary of f100 as gecommitteerde, also with £56, for salary as voorlecser (reader in the church) during two months and one week in 1653. In a petition for salary, March 27, 1648, he states that he has been for more than six years in the service of the patroon and for four years has not received any salary; that he has now been entrusted with a new office without any mention of salary; and that he must have a house built inasmuch as the storehouse, assigned to him for a dwelling, has been turned into a church.
...On 29 October 1647, a little more than two years into his tenure as de facto commis-general of Rensselaerswijck, De Hooges married Eva (or Affien) Albertsz Bradt, a woman probably more than a dozen years his junior but who, like Anthony, had been born in Amsterdam. Eva was the daughter of Annetje Barents and Albert Andriesz Bradt, de Noorman [the Norwegian], originally from Fredrikstad in southeast Norway. De Hooges’s in-laws had lived in the patroonship for more than a decade by the time of their daughter’s wedding. Albert, who had the reputation (at least early on) of being a difficult and demanding person, had worked as a tobacco planter and mill builder/operator in the patroonship.
...Several months after his death, his wife apparently found it necessary to turn to the deacons of the church for a loan. A little more than a year later, when she remarried, she mortgaged her real property to set aside relatively small sums for the heirs she shared with her late husband—one hundred guilders each for their five children.
...Anthony De Hooges did not leave a legacy of great wealth to his biological descendents. Nor did he become the fabled patriarch of a large New World clan bearing his family name; four of his children were girls and his only son died without a surviving male heir. Ironically, however, it is possible that he did, nevertheless, leave his mark—or at least his given name—on the Hudson Valley (or maps of it). Some of the earliest mentions of De Hooges made by researchers state (though without providing documentation) that the “promontory” or “mountain” which stands near the east landing of the Bear Mountain Bridge over the Hudson River, a few miles up from Peekskill, was named for De Hooges—enshrining in cartography a facial feature for which he was evidently remembered by those who had known him personally—as “Anthony’s Nose” (later renamed St. Anthony’s Nose).
Reference:
1. Mouw, Dirk. The Memorandum Book of Anthony de Hooges. N.p.: New Netherland Research and the New Netherland Institute, 2012.
2. Van Laer, A. J. F. Archivist. Van Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts: Being the Letters of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, 1630-1643 and Other Documents Relating to the Colony of Rensselaerswyck. Albany: University of the State of New York, 1908.
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Sources |
- [S1888] Find A Grave, Find A Grave Memorial# 144438719 - Anthony "Antoni" de Hooges.
Anthony "Antoni" de Hooges
Birth: Dec. 14, 1620, Amsterdam Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
Death: Oct. 11, 1655, Rensselaer County, New York, USA
Burial: Body lost or destroyed
Specifically: Death in Albany, New York.
Created by: Ralph H. and Hilda Sayre...
Record added: Apr 01, 2015
Find A Grave Memorial# 144438719
- [S1596] Book: The Register of New Netherland, p104 - Anthoney de Hooges.
Town Clerk - 1642 Anthoney de Hooges
Landed at the Manhattans 29th November, 1641; his widow married Roelof Swartwout.
- [S686] Book: The Biggs Family, p33, Roeloff Swartwout.
Roeloff Swartwout was the son of Tomys and and Hendrickjen (Otsen) Swartwout. Roeloff was bom and baptized in Amsterdam, Holland. On August 13, 1657, in Beverswyck, New Netherland, he married Eva (Bradt) de Hooges, the widow of Antoni de Hooges, and the daughter of Albert Andriessen and Armetje Barentse (von Rottmers) Bradt
13 August 1657
- [S687] Book: A Brink Addendum 1997, pg. 2 - Huybert's Family.
...Huybert Lambertse (Brink) ba. 1655, d. 1719 at Hurley, Ulster Co., NY (s/o Lambert Huybertse & Hendrickje Cornelisse) m. Hendrickje Swartwout d/o Roeloff Swartwout "Schout of Esopus" & R.S.'s wife Eva Albertson Bradt b.ca. 1633 in Holland, widow of Anthony de Hooges, Secretary at Fort Orange, Huybert & Hendrickje resided & remained at Hurley throughout their lives.
- [S1516] Book: Memorandum Book of Anthony de Hooges, pXV - Anthony de Hooges and Eva.
On 29 October 1647, a little more than two years into his tenure as de facto commis-general of Rensselaerswijck, De Hooges married Eva (or Affien) Albertsz Bradt, a woman probably more than a dozen years his junior but who, like Anthony, had been born in Amsterdam. Eva was the daughter of Annetje Barents and Albert Andriesz Bradt, de Noorman [the Norwegian], originally from Fredrikstad in southeast Norway. De
Hooges’s in-laws had lived in the patroonship for more than a decade by the time of their daughter’s wedding. Albert, who had the reputation (at least early on) of being a difficult and demanding person, had worked as a tobacco planter and mill builder/operator in the patroonship.
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