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Rachel Winne

Rachel Winne

Female 1690 -

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Rachel Winne was born in 1690 (daughter of Adam Winne and Anna Loockermans).

    Other Events:

    • Name: Rachel Winne
    • Reference Number: 7853
    • Baptism: 8 Aug 1690, Manhattan, Kings, New York, USA


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Adam Winne was born in 1656 (son of Peter Winney and Tannatje Adams); died on 18 Oct 1690.

    Other Events:

    • Name: Adam Winne
    • Reference Number: 7803

    Notes:

    Died:
    Age: 34

    Adam married Anna Loockermans before 1684. Anna (daughter of Pieter Loockermans and Maria Duncanson) was born in 1657; died in 1742. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anna Loockermans was born in 1657 (daughter of Pieter Loockermans and Maria Duncanson); died in 1742.

    Other Events:

    • Name: Annetje Lookerman
    • Reference Number: 7804

    Notes:

    From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Loockermans-27
    Anna Loockermans was the daughter of Pieter Loockermans and his wife Maria Duncanson. She was born in 1663 or earlier, probably in Beverwyck (now Albany, New York).[1][2]

    She married Adam Winne (abt.1656-bef.1690) in 1683 and bore at least six children (according to Bielinski) or five daughters (according to Frijhoff, pp. 37-38).

    Children of the first marriage include:

    Rachel, daughter of Adam Winne and Anna Loockermans, baptized in the Reformed Dutch Church of New York on 8 August 1690.[3]
    After the death of Adam Winne, she married Jacob (Teunisz) van Woerdt (abt.1660-1730) (van Woert), who was a widower. They resided in Albany. During this second marriage, she gave birth to at least ten children whose baptisms were recorded in the Albany Reformed Dutch Church.[4]

    Anna's last recorded child was baptized in 1704. Her husband, Jacob Teunise died in July 1730 and was buried at the Albany Reformed Dutch Church.[1][2]Anna died, 30 May 1756 or 31 July 1742, and was buried in the Albany Dutch Churchyard Cemetery [2]

    Church Records
    Marriage
    1691 18 Oct Jacob Teunisz, widr. of Catryn Claasz, and Annetje Lookerman, wid. of Adam Winne, both l. at N. A.
    Children's Baptisms
    1690. den 8 Aug. Ouders: Adam Winnt, Anna Loockermans. Kinders: Rachel. Getuÿgen: Brandt Schuyler, Catharina Van Cortlant.
    1692 23 Oct Pieter, of Jacob Teunisz and Anna Lookerman. Wit.: Henderik Hansz, Catrina Renselaar.
    1693 31 Dec Sara, of Jacob Tuenisz and Anna Lookerman. Wit.: Hendrik V. Renselaar, Marritje Lookerman.
    1695 16 Jun Jeremias, of Jacob Tuenisz and Anna Lookerman. Wit.: Gerrit Van Esch, Hilletje Lookerman.
    1696 17 May Jeremie, of Jacob Teunisz and Anna Lookerman. Wit.: Kiliaan Van Renselaar, Marietje Van Es.
    1697 01 Aug Sara, of Jacob Teunisz and Anna Lokerman. Wit.: Jan Fonda, Debora V. Dam.
    1698 30 Oct Jacob, of Jacob Teunisz, of Tainisz, and Anna Lokerman. Wit.: Hendrik Van Esch, Catrina Van Esch. [5]
    1700 21 Jul Margariet, of Jacob Teunisz and Annigje Lokermans. Wit.: Jan Jansz Bleyker, Grietje Bleyker.
    1701 02 Nov Heyltje, of Jacob Teunisse and Annetje Lokermans. Wit.: Aryen Oothout, Lammertje Lokermans.
    1704 24 Dec Catharina, of Jacobus Teunisse Van Woerd and Anna Lokermans. Wit.: Cornelis Teeuwisse Muller, Hilletje Muller. [6]
    Research Notes
    Marriage:
    Date: 18 OCT 1691[7]
    Sources
    ↑ 1.0 1.1 Frijhoff, Willem. Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) and His Relatives: How an Adolescent from Turnhout Worked His Way up in the New World, p. 37
    ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Bielinski, Stefan. Anna Loockermans. "The People of Colonial Albany." New York State Museum. Accessed 08 Dec 2017.
    ↑ Evans, page 197. Text: 1690. den 8 Aug. Ouders: Adam Winnt, Anna Loockermans. Kinders: Rachel. Getuÿgen: Brandt Schuyler, Catharina Van Cortlant.
    ↑ The Albany records and Bielinski both indicate ten children. Frijhoff states (p. 38) that there were four sons and four daughters from Anna's marriage to Jacob van Woert.
    ↑ Secretary Henry L. Bogert "[Albany] Marriage Record, Commenced in the Year 1683" in Year Book of the Holland Society of New York. New York: Knickerbocker Press, New York, 1904.
    ↑ Secretary Henry L. Bogert. "Records of the R.D. Church of Albany" in Year Book of the Holland Society of New York. New York: Knickerbocker Press, New York, 1905.
    ↑ Source: #S00007 Page: p. 139, Van Woert families Data: Text: VAN WOEKT, Jacob Teunise, m. first Catryn Claase and secondly, Anna Loockerman, wid. of Adam Winne, Oct. 18, 1691. He was buried July 18, 1730. Ch : bp. ; Nicolaas, June 3, 1684 ; Ruth ; Pieter, Oct. 23, 1692; Sara, Dec. 31, 1693; Jeremias, June 16, 1695 ; Jeremie, May 17, 1696 ; Sara, Aug. 1, 1697 : Jacob, Oct. 30, 1698 ; Margriet, July 21, 1700 ; Heyltje Nov. 2, 1701 ; Catharina, Dec. 24, 1704.
    Bielinski, Stefan. Anna Loockermans. "The People of Colonial Albany." New York State Museum. Accessed 08 Dec 2017.
    Frijhoff, Willem. Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) and His Relatives: How an Adolescent from Turnhout Worked His Way up in the New World. Translation of article "Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) en zijn verwanten: Hoe een Turnhoutenaar zich wist op te werken in de Nieuwe Wereld," published in Taxandria, Jaarboek van de Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van de Antwerpse Kempen, LXXXII (2011), 5-68. Published at [1] by New Netherland Institute; retrieved 29 November 2014. 52 pages.

    Children:
    1. Annake Winne was born on 15 Oct 1687; died in Mar 1778.
    2. 1. Rachel Winne was born in 1690.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Peter Winney was born before 1638; died on 7 May 1693.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 7852

    Notes:

    Birth:
    based on child's birth

    Peter married Tannatje Adams. Tannatje was born before 1638. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Tannatje Adams was born before 1638.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 7851

    Notes:

    Birth:
    based on child's birth

    Children:
    1. 2. Adam Winne was born in 1656; died on 18 Oct 1690.

  3. 6.  Pieter Loockermans was born on 5 Oct 1614 in Turnhout, Antwerpen, Belgium (son of Jacob Loockermans and Maeyken Nicasius).

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 8887

    Notes:

    From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Loockermans-13
    Note on identity
    Pieter Loockermans lived in Beverwyck (Albany, New York) in the same years as his nephew and fellow immigrant Pieter Janse Loockermans, and researchers have had found it challenging to determine the family relationships and distinguish the life events of the two men. When both were living in the same area, this Pieter Loockermans was sometimes described as "Pieter the Elder" and his nephew as "Pieter the Younger" (Pieter de Jonge). The epithets "Elder" and "Younger" do not appear in records from years after 1670, which some researchers have interpreted as indicating that Pieter the Elder had died around that time. However, Pieter the Younger was too young to have been the father of the daughters attributed to the Pieter who survived, indicating that it was Pieter the Younger who died around 1670, and Pieter the Elder who lived on.[1]

    Biography
    Pieter (formally Petrus) Loockermans was born in 1614 in Turnhout, Flanders, the son of Jacob Loockermans and his wife Maria (Maeyken).[2].

    In 1637 he married Ursula Vissers in Turnhout.[2] A son, Jacobus, was born in 1638 and baptized in Turhout.[2]. There is no later record of Ursula or Jacobus, and it is surmised that they both died around 1641, the year that Pieter emigrated to New Netherland. [2].

    After arriving in New Netherland, Pieter appears to have settled first in New Amsterdam (modern New York City), where in January 1642 he witnessed the baptism of the child of another Flemish immigrant.[2] In 1648 he witnessed the baptism, in New Amsterdam, of his nephew Johannes van Cortlandt, the son of his sister Anneke.[2].

    His name appears on several records from Rensselaerswyck and Beverwyck/Albany on dates between April 15, 1649 and April 7, 1685. He received a land patent in Beverwyck in 1653 and bought a house there in 1656. His occupation was listed at various times as carpenter), gunstock maker, and innkeeper, and in 1660 he signed a petition in Beverwyck as a small fur trader.[2].

    Pieter married Maria as his second wife around 1650. Maria is often identified as Maria Duncanson/Donchesen/Donckesen,[3] but her identity has been the subject of some debate.[2]. In preparation for his second marriage, in 1664, to Maria Varleth, Willem Teller made provision for his children by his first wife and appointed as their guardians "Sander Leendertse Glen and Pieter Loockermans, uncles of said children." This is interpreted as indicating that Pieter Loockermans' wife Maria was the sister of either Willem Teller or his deceased wife " Margariet Donckesen" (Duncanson).[4] Because Margaret Duncanson had a sister Maria born about the same time as Pieter Loockermans, others Duncanson sisters lived in New Netherland, and there is no record of Willem Teller having any sisters in New Netherland,[5][4] it is most likely that Pieter's second wife was Maria Duncanson. [6] Pieter and Maria are recorded as the parents of four daughters, Maria, Annetje, Hilletje, and Catharina (Catelyntje).[7]

    Sources
    ↑ Frijhoff, pp. 13-14
    ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Frijhoff, p36
    ↑ See, for example, Bielinski.
    ↑ 4.0 4.1 Remington, Gordon L. "The Duncanson Wives of Four New Netherland Settlers: Glen, Teller, Powell, and Loockermans," NYGBR, Jan. 1997, pgs. 1-10.
    ↑ Bower-McBurney Genealogy
    ↑ In view of her age, the marriage to Pieter is likely to have been Maria's second marriage. A possible record of her first marriage exists in the form of banns posted in January 1640 for the marriage in Amsterdam, Holland, of a 25-year-old Maria Donckes and a James Macfasse, both from Scotland (cited by Bower-McBurney Genealogy).
    ↑ Frijhoff, pp. 37-38
    Bielinski, Stefan. Maria Donchesen Loockermans, The People of Colonial Albany, New York State Museum, October 30, 2005.
    Bower-McBurney Genealogy [1]
    Burke, Adrian Benjamin, "The Livingston Ancestry of the Duncanson Sisters of New Netherland: Pt I of III: Identifying their mother Helen Livingston," The Genealogist 27 (Spring 2013): 28-50, at 49.
    Frijhoff, Willem. Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) and His Relatives: How an Adolescent from Turnhout Worked His Way up in the New World. Translation of article "Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) en zijn verwanten: Hoe een Turnhoutenaar zich wist op te werken in de Nieuwe Wereld," published in Taxandria, Jaarboek van de Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van de Antwerpse Kempen, LXXXII (2011), 5-68. Published at [2] (Internet archive version) by New Netherland Institute; retrieved 29 November 2014. 52 pages. Revised version, dated 7 January 2016, was accessed on the New Netherland website on 3 May 2016.
    Pearson, Jonathan. Contributions for the Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Ancient County of Albany from 1630 to 1800. (Albany: J. Munsell, 1872)
    Remington, Gordon L. "The Duncanson Wives of Four New Netherland Settlers: Glen, Teller, Powell, and Loockermans," NYGBR, Jan. 1997, pgs. 1-10.

    Pieter married Maria Duncanson. Maria (daughter of James Duncanson, M.A. and Helen Livingston) was born about 1614 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Maria Duncanson was born about 1614 in Scotland (daughter of James Duncanson, M.A. and Helen Livingston).

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 9193

    Notes:

    from https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Duncanson-15
    Maria Duncanson (also Donchesen, Donckesen, and other variants) was born in Scotland about 1614. In about 1650, she was living in New Netherland, where she became the second wife of Pieter Loockermans. In view of her age, Pieter is likely to have been Maria's second husband. A possible record of her first marriage exists in the form of banns posted in January 1640 for the marriage in Amsterdam, Holland, of a 25-year-old Maria Donckes and a James Macfasse, both from Scotland.

    The identity of Loockermans' second wife Maria has been the subject of some debate. In preparation for his second marriage, in 1664, to Maria Varleth, Willem Teller made provision for his children by his first wife and appointed as their guardians "Sander Leendertse Glen and Pieter Loockermans, uncles of said children." This is interpreted as indicating that Pieter Loockermans' wife Maria was the sister of either Willem Teller or his deceased wife "Margariet Donckesen" (Duncanson). Because Margaret Duncanson had a sister Maria born about the same time as Pieter Loockermans, other Duncanson sisters lived in New Netherland, and there is no record of Willem Teller having any sisters in New Netherland, it is most likely that it was Maria Duncanson who was Pieter Loockermans' second wife.

    Children:
    1. Caatje Loockermans was born after 1630.
    2. Maria Loockermans was born in 1641; died in 1714.
    3. Pieter Loockermans was born in 1646; died in 1684.
    4. 3. Anna Loockermans was born in 1657; died in 1742.
    5. Hilletje Loockermans was born in 1658; died in 1742.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Jacob Loockermans was born on 26 Mar 1583 in Turnhout, Antwerpen, Belgium (son of Goyvaert Loockermans); died in 1636.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 9194

    Notes:

    From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Loockermans-5
    Jacob (Jacobus) Lokermans (Loockermans) was born in 1583 in Turnhout, Flanders, Belgium.[1] (Boyer states that he was born about 1590 in Turnhout, Antwerp Province, Belgium.[2])

    He married Maeyken (Maria) Nicasius (Casus, Caes) on January 22, 1606, in Turnhout.[3] They had at least eight children, born between 1610 and 1622: Petrus (died young), Jan, Godefridus, Petrus (Pieter), Godefridus (Govert), Anna (Anneken), Mathias and Paulus (probably died young).[4]

    On April 26, 1613, Jacob received permission to go to France to ‘torff te maecken’ (cut peat) and ‘de spraecke aldaer te leeren’ (learn the language there). As of February 8, 1617 he was back in Turnhout.[5] His son Govert apparently was born during the years when the family was in France.[6]

    Jacob died in 1636,[7] probably in Turnhout. His widow died in 1640. Her estate was liquidated in 1640, at which time it was "laden with debt."[8]

    Sources
    ↑ Frijhoff, p.33
    ↑ Ancestral Lines by Carl Boyer, 1998, pg 378
    ↑ Frijhoff, p.33
    ↑ Frijhoff, pp. 33-48
    ↑ Frijhoff, pp. 33-34
    ↑ Frijhoff, p. 9
    ↑ Frijhoff, p. 33
    ↑ Frijhoff, p. 34
    Frijhoff, Willem. Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) and His Relatives: How an Adolescent from Turnhout Worked His Way up in the New World. Translation of article "Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) en zijn verwanten: Hoe een Turnhoutenaar zich wist op te werken in de Nieuwe Wereld," published in Taxandria, Jaarboek van de Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van de Antwerpse Kempen, LXXXII (2011), 5-68. Published at [1] by New Netherland Institute; retrieved 29 November 2014. 52 pages. Revised version, January 7, 2016 18 August 2017
    Frijhoff, Willem. Frijhoff (Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam) Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) en zijn verwanten: Hoe een Turnhoutenaar zich wist op te werken in de Nieuwe Wereld, added 19 August 2017

    Died:
    Probably Turnhout, Flanders, Belgium

    Jacob married Maeyken Nicasius. Maeyken was born in 1585; died in 1640. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Maeyken Nicasius was born in 1585; died in 1640.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 9195

    Notes:

    From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Nicasius-1
    Maria Nicasius was the wife of Jacob Loockermans and mother of his children. They married in 1606 in Turnhout, Flanders. He died in 1636, and she died in 1640. [1]

    No record of her birth is known. The name "Nicasius" is alternatively rendered as "Casus" or "Caes."[2]

    Sources
    ↑ Frijhoff, pp. 9 and 33-34
    ↑ Frijhoff, p. 34
    Frijhoff, Willem. Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) and His Relatives: How an Adolescent from Turnhout Worked His Way up in the New World. Translation of article "Govert Loockermans (1617?-1671?) en zijn verwanten: Hoe een Turnhoutenaar zich wist op te werken in de Nieuwe Wereld," published in Taxandria, Jaarboek van de Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van de Antwerpse Kempen, LXXXII (2011), 5-68. Published at [1] by New Netherland Institute; retrieved 29 November 2014. 52 pages Revised version, January 7, 2016. Accessed 18 August 2017
    * Pearson, Jonathan. Contributions for the Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Ancient County of Albany, from 1630 to 1800. Albany, N.Y.: J. Munsell, 1872. p. 75

    Died:
    Probably Turnhout, Flanders, Belgium

    Children:
    1. 6. Pieter Loockermans was born on 5 Oct 1614 in Turnhout, Antwerpen, Belgium.

  3. 14.  James Duncanson, M.A. was born about 1564 in Scotland (son of John Duncanson and Janet Watson); died on 11 Jul 1624 in Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 9777

    Notes:

    Inaugurated 12 Feb 1589 as Minister of Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland

    James married Helen Livingston about 1603. Helen (daughter of Henry Livingston and Agnes Gray) was born about 1575 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Helen Livingston was born about 1575 in Scotland (daughter of Henry Livingston and Agnes Gray).

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 9778

    Children:
    1. 7. Maria Duncanson was born about 1614 in Scotland.