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Genealogy Of The Felsing Family
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 #   Notes   Linked to 
3501 christening date Bradley, Dan (I8445)
 
3502 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I10182)
 
3503 church confirmation record Baum, Katherine Margaretha (I6162)
 
3504 Church Newspaper Source (S19)
 
3505 Church of Saint Mary Family (F978)
 
3506 Church Records. Episcopal Diocese of Newark, Newark, New Jersey. Source (S1204)
 
3507 Church Registers. Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Source (S504)
 
3508 Church Registers. Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Source (S1019)
 
3509 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15618)
 
3510 City Lutheran Church in Friedberg Family (F760)
 
3511 Civil War Muster Roll Abstracts of New York State Volunteers, United States Sharpshooters, and United States Colored Troops [ca. 1861-1900], Albany, New York: New York State Archives Source (S416)
 
3512 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13641)
 
3513 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I13605)
 
3514 Clare-284 de Clare, Maud (I7981)
 
3515 Clare-639 de Clare, Thomas (I7982)
 
3516 Clemens, William Montgomery, American Marriage Records Before 1699, Pompton Lakes, NJ, USA: Biblio Co., 1926 Source (S122)
 
3517 Clere-114 Clere, Sir John (I8025)
 
3518 Clere-3 Clere, Sir Robert (I8052)
 
3519 Clere-45 Clere, Anne (I8013)
 
3520 Clere-46 Clere, Sir Edward (I8017)
 
3521 Cleveland Township Cemetery Shalda, Joseph (I4866)
 
3522 Cleveland Township Cemetery Rericha, Elanora (I5475)
 
3523 Clifford-242 Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford Robert (I7870)
 
3524 Clifford-59 Clifford, Idoine (I7869)
 
3525 Cole was a second husband after divorcing George Henry Snyder, Katherine (I4737)
 
3526 Commonwealth of Kentucky, Health Data Branch, Divisision of Epidemiology and Health Planning, Kentucky Death Index, 1911-present, Frankfort, KY, USA: Kentucky Department of Information Systems Source (S696)
 
3527 Commonwealth of Kentucky, Health Data Branch, Divisision of Epidemiology and Health Planning. <i>Kentucky Death Index, 1911-present</i>. Frankfort, KY, USA: Kentucky Department of Information Systems. Source (S442)
 
3528 Compiled from various family history sources. See source information provided with each entry. Source (S736)
 
3529 Compiled from various family history sources. See source information provided with each entry. Source (S1125)
 
3530 Confused in Quaker records with Martha Norbury b. 17687 d. 1845. That was actually Martha Burges who married George Norbury b. 3/29/1770 Norbury, Martha (I9530)
 
3531 Connecticut County, District and Probate Courts. Source (S650)
 
3532 Connecticut Department of Health. Connecticut Death Index, 1949-2001. Hartford, CT, USA: Connecticut Department of Health. Source (S1095)
 
3533 Connecticut Historical Society. Rolls of Connecticut Men in the French and Indian War, 1755-1762. Vol. I-II. Hartford, CT, USA: Connecticut Historical Society, 1903-1905. Source (S616)
 
3534 Connecticut. Church Records Index. Connecticut State Library, Hartford, Connecticut. Source (S127)
 
3535 Considered a "Gateway Ancestor" into English Royalty See Gary Roberts 'The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants' p. 451. Ward, Thomasine (I7382)
 
3536 Conyers-56 Conyers, Sir Christopher (I7970)
 
3537 Conyers-57 Conyers, Sir John (I7971)
 
3538 Conyers-94 Conyers, Joan (I7967)
 
3539 Cook County Clerk, comp. Cook County Clerk Genealogy Records. Cook County Clerk’s Office, Chicago, IL: Cook County Clerk, 2008. Source (S1168)
 
3540 Cook County Clerk, Cook County Clerk Genealogy Records, Cook County Clerk’s Office, Chicago, IL: Cook County Clerk, 2008 Source (S444)
 
3541 Cook County Clerk. Cook County Clerk Genealogy Records. Cook County Clerk’s Office, Chicago, IL: Cook County Clerk, 2008. Source (S1093)
 
3542 Copied from The Furler Family Webpage at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rykbrown/furler.htm

Our present accounting of the Furler family begins with Jacob Völler who was born around 1734 on Robert Livingston's estate on the west side of the Hudson River in Ulster County, New York. It is suggested that he was the son of Johann Phillip Veller and Catharina Elisabeth Rauch. His suggested birth family can be found at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rykbrown/voller.htm

Ulster County, New York
Ulster County is in the southeast part of New York State, south of Albany and bordered on the east by the Hudson River. It is nestled among the Catskill Mountains and contains some of the earliest European settlements in North America. The county was settled by the Dutch as early as 1614 as part of the New Netherlands settlement. A trading post was established at Rondout with a few families and was subsequently destroyed by First Nations Peoples. In the 1630s the trading post was re-established and again destroyed in 1655, but by the 1660s a stable settlement pattern was emerging. The Dutch were followed in 1663 by a settlement of French Huguenots. In 1683 Ulster County was organized as a county by the English as one of the original 12 counties of the British colony of New York. For the following 9 decades Ulster County saw steady immigration and development until the outbreak of the American Revolution. The various battles of the American Revolution destroyed many of the frontier settlements and the larger towns were all captured by the English. In 1777 many of the towns, including Kingston, were pillaged and burned.
Two local towns become significant for the purposes of our Furler family history: Marbletown and Kingston.
Marbletown
Marbletown is located in the central part of the county and was one of the original five English townships in 1683. Old soldiers of the Indian wars and veterans of the English Army who came in 1664 received grants there from the government in 1670 and settled in a village at what is now called North Marbletown, but soon scattered and took up the outlying land for farms, which in some cases they purchased from the local First Nations Peoples. The town lands, covering the area of many of these purchases, were granted by Queen Anne to the town trustees on June 25,1703, and were re-conveyed by them to settlers. It has always been an excellent farming country. Civil government was established by 1703. Marbletown is the location of First Dutch Reformed Church where some of our early Furler baptisms can be found.
Kingston
Kingston, as it is known today, was originally called Wiltwyck (Dutch for "wild woods"), It was an early Dutch walled settlement which, when taken over by the English, became the early colonial capital and home of the county courthouse from 1684 onwards. Kingston was chartered as a town in 1667 and local government was in the hands of twelve trustees, five of whom formed the court, which continued until the early 19th century. Kingston survived the Indian Wars of the mid-18th century, and it was after this period that more aggressive colonial settlement began. With the First Nations Peoples "pacified" it became "safe" for white settlers to venture beyond the early walled villages and forts. Kingston became a major crossroads on travel routes between Boston, Philadelphia and Albany. Kingston had its share of wealthy land owners including the Livingston family. These landlords did not live quite as lavishly as their Southern counterparts, but they still owned slaves and lived with an air of aristocracy. In 1872, the two villages of Rondout and Kingston were combined together to form the present-day city of Kingston.
Very little is known of Jacob Völler except that he was a tenant farmer on the estate of the Livingston family mentioned above. Jacob's birth year is uncertain, but it appears that he was very young when he had his first son. His full family is detailed below, but his eldest two sons become significant for our narrative: Jacob and Cornelius Völler, born 1750 and 1753, respectively, in Ulster County, New York. Their baptisms are registered in Kingston, but they were probably baptized by an itinerant minister. It appears that their actual residence and place of birth was near Shandaken or Shokan on the north shore of what is today the Ashokan Reservoir in the Catskill State Park, about 10 km west of Kingston.
Jacob and Cornelius continued as tenant farmers, just as their father had, also on the estate of Robert Livingston, until the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1776.
 
Furlow(Voeller), Jacob (I5569)
 
3543 Copied from The Furler Family Webpage at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rykbrown/furler.htm

Pvt. Jacob Völler FURLER , U.E. b: 1750 in Ulster County, New York Colony, British North America. Jacob and Cornelius Furler grew up in Ulster County, New York. They appear to have been tenant farmers on the property of Robert Livingston. During the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1776 they were recruited by Captain Peter TenBroek to serve with Col. Butler's Rangers. In 1777 they were captured by the Americans in New Paltz, New York and tried at Fort Montgomery. (Trial documents in 1777 record Jacob and Cornelius Furler as "tenants for life" living on the land of Robert Livingston.) They were convicted of treason and sentenced to hang. They managed to convince the court that they were young and naive and had been seduced by British offers of free land for their service. For some reason the court was lenient and dismissed their sentence. Having been freed, it appears they went straight back into service in Butler's Rangers.
After the war, in 1783 they were released from service in the Niagara area of southern Ontario, where they were permitted to apply for land grants from the British Crown. Records show they did not apply for their grants until 1798. During those intervening years they returned to the area of Woodstock in Ulster County, New York, where they are found in the 1790 census.

On 30 May 1798 Jacob and Cornelius both petitioned for Loyalist military land grants as soldiers reduced in 1783. It notes that each of their families were "not in the province" at the time of the petition. Census records show that their families were back in Woodstock, Ulster County, New York, USA in 1800. Census records indicate that Jacob remained in Ulster County for the remainder of his life so it would seem that he never claimed his entitled land grant in southern Ontario.

In 1790 Jacob was living in Middletown, Ulster County with the following family: 1m +16, 2m-16, 3f. It is believed that Jacob's wife, Majke was dead before 1783 and that the three females shown here are his daughters. In 1800 Jacob is found with his brothers, Cornelius and John, as well as his brother-in-law Coonradt Meisner, in Woodstock, Ulster County, New York with the following family: 1m-10, 1m45+, 2f-10,1f26-45. It is believed that the ages of the younger children are incorrectly recorded. His son Jacob has established his own farm nearby in Woodstock by this time. Jacob is not found in the 1810 census and is presumed to have died.

Jacob married in 1768 in Ulster County, New York Colony, British North America to Majke CRISPELL b: 27 AUG 1738 in Kingston, Ulster County, New York Colony, British North America. 
Furlow(Voeller), Jacob (I5570)
 
3544 Copied from the Furler family website at http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rykbrown/furler.htm

During the years leading up to outbreak of the American Revolution in 1776 a spirit of independence was already growing in the New York colony, and the people of Ulster County were described as "patriotic, almost to a man". During the American Revolution, Kingston, as the state capital, became a key strategic point. An improvised state senate house was established in the home of the Ten Broeck family (a name which becomes significant below).
In the spring of 1777, during the Revolution, men from Shandaken and Shokan were induced by British recruiting officers to desert their homes and join a party headed for New York City to enlist in the King's army. Attractive promises were made to them that they would receive one hundred acres for each man and fifty acres for each child in his family.
Among those who joined up were Jacob and Cornelius Völler (a.k.a. Furlow or Furler) and their brothers-in-law, William Diets (a.k.a. Teets) and Hendricke Crispel. The whole party was captured near New Paltz and taken to Fort Montgomery for trial. The trial took place in April 1777 and most of them were condemned to be hanged for treason. Most of the men, including Jacob and Cornelius Furler, William Diets and Hendrick Crispel, were later pardoned on account of youth or other extenuating circumstances and released. Although it is recorded that the Shandaken men promptly joined the patriot forces, the Furlers appear to have remained with the British under the command of Captain Peter Ten Broeck in the company of Butler's Rangers.
A reference from Berthold Fernow's book, New York in the Revolution, p.225, cites: "New York Line, Fourth Company Privates: Furrlough, Corn., May 24 '77, 3 yrs, des'd [deserted] Apr 19 '78, MR."
In the fall of 1777 the British forces occupied Kingston and on October 16, 1777 they burned the town to the ground.
Captain Peter Ten Broeck of Butler's Rangers
At the outbreak of the American Revolution, John Butler was a successful farmer on the Mohawk River opposite Fort Hunter (now Fonda, NY). He held the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the colonial militia of New York and the appointment of Deputy Superintendent in the British Indian Department. In November 1775, John Butler was posted to Fort Niagara with instructions to maintain the neutrality of the Six Nations in accordance with British policy. By 1777 the British realized that rebel overtures to the Six Nations might succeed in winning them to the American side and thus they were recruited to fight for the British against the Americans. In August 1777, Butler gathered a large force of Indians at Oswego while Rebel forces gathered on the Mohawk River, and at the Battle at Oriskany Creek Butler successfully decimated the rebel army. Butler was then authorized to raise a Corps of Rangers to serve with the Indians on the frontiers. The Beating Order was issued 15 September 1777 and Butler's Rangers came into being. Recruiting began immediately and although slow, the Rangers were probably the most successful corps in the North in attracting recruits.
Among the Captains in Butler's Rangers was one Captain Peter Ten Broeck, and recorded among his company were Privates Jacob and Cornelius Furler (or Furlow). (See Roster of Butler's Rangers.) Privates in Butler's Rangers were paid 2 shillings, 6 pence per day.
Peter Ten Broeck had been a Captain in the New York Militia in the Mohawk Valley. He served as a Captain in the York Provincial Regiment during the Seven Year's War. At the outbreak of the American Revolution he was taken by the Americans at Shoemaker's Tavern along with Walter Butler (the son of Colonel John Butler) in September 1777. He eventually escaped and was subsequently commissioned in the Rangers on 4 May 1778. Walter Butler registered a complaint against Ten Broeck for his conduct while a prisoner and Ten Broeck's loyalty was called into question. He was later cleared of any wrongdoing by a Court Marshall in 1781 at Fort Niagara.
By late 1783 the men of Butler's Rangers were released from service and given their promised 100 acres each in the area of the Niagara Peninsula of southeastern Ontario. Among those who were decommissioned were Jacob and Cornelius Furler (Furlow), however they did not claim their land grants until 15 years later. In the meantime they returned to Ulster County in New York and settled on farms in Woodstock township. As the Niagara Peninsula was still largely uncleared land at that time, it may be that Jacob and Cornelius sent their families back to New York to live in a more settled location while Jacob and Cornelius travelled back and forth to establish their land claims, clear their land, and build houses in which to live. It is known that their wives' families (Crispell and Diets) remained in New York which would also explain the many later trips back and forth between Ontario and New York State.
 
Furler (Furlow), Cornelius (I5682)
 
3545 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15890)
 
3546 Corey Griffin and Sarah Smith came to New Brunswick in 1783 as a Loyalist. They settled at New Canaan, Brunswick Parish, Queen County according to Genealogies (first families) at the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Canada Smith, Sarah (I4646)
 
3547 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I15859)
 
3548 could be Patty in 1834 probate? Hulse, Martha (I1642)
 
3549 Could his two spouses be the same person? Could Mabel K be Katherine? Thomas, Omer Arthur (I11271)
 
3550 Could this Sally Shultz be SA Shultz? S.A. was not listed as an heir in 1866, so she would have been deceased by then. Not on 1860 census, probably deceased then. But when? If the 4 Shultz names listed together are siblings, then Sally would have to be S.A. I would think that is the likely answer.

http://www.usgennet.org/usa/mi/county/tuscola/hist/junfir.htmTaken from The History of Tuscola County, Biographical Sketches and Illustrations, H. R. Page Co., Chicago, 1883. Thanks to Bonnie Petee.
The first school in the town of Juniata was taught in the summer of 1853 by Miss Ellen E. Miller, now wife of Charles R. Seldon of Caro. The building used was a low log shanty, built by D. G. Wilder to live in, until he could construct a better habitation. It stood nealy opposite the present site of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in Watrousville. The following are the names of pupils who attended this first term of school: Sarah, Arvilla, and Eliza McGlone, George, Charles and Abraham Pettingill, Nancy, John and Dall Streeter, Jennie and James King, George Smith, Mary, Sally, Albert and Emily Schultz, Martha Huntley, Lemuel Gamble, Jonathan, Clarissa and Salmon Simons, Nelson and Dana Miller, and Anna Morrell. 
Shultz, Sarah Ann (I6100)
 
3551 Cox, John, Jr., comp. Quaker Records: Nine-Partners Monthly Meeting, Dutchess Co., N.Y.Source (S794)
 
3552 Cox, John, Jr., comp. Quaker Records: Nine-Partners Monthly Meeting, Dutchess Co., N.Y.Source (S1089)
 
3553 cremated Everetts, Eleanor (I6778)
 
3554 CurrentMarriageNumber: First Family (F4155)
 
3555 Curtis, O. B.. <i>History of the Twenty-fourth Michigan of the Iron Brigade : known as the Detroit and Wayne County Regiment : illustrated</i>. Detroit, Mich.: Winn & Hammond, 1891. Source (S538)
 
3556 Cypress Lawn Memorial Cemetery Smith, Hazel Amelia (I5043)
 
3557 d young Sherman, Judge (I17498)
 
3558 d young Sherman, Judge (I17498)
 
3559 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I11630)
 
3560 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I3750)
 
3561 Darby Cemetery Conklin, James E. (I4965)
 
3562 Darcy-98 Darcy, Elizabeth (I8019)
 
3563 Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA form the <a href="/handler/domainrd.ashx?domain=SearchDomain&url=/search/dbextra.aspx&dbid=3737">following list of works</a>. Copyright 1997-2000<br> Historical Data Systems, Inc.<br> PO Box 35<br> Duxbury. Source (S168)
 
3564 Data compiled by Historical Data Systems of Kingston, MA from the <a href="/handler/domainrd.ashx?domain=AncestryDomain&url=/search/rectype/military/cwrd/db.aspx">following list of works</a>.<p>Copyright 1997-2009<br>Historical Data Systems, Inc.<br> PO Box 35<br>Duxbury, MA 02331.</p> Source (S268)
 
3565 database at http://www.newenglandancestors.org/database_search/Lancaster_vr.asp? Source (S220)
 
3566 database-on-line ancestry.com Source (S119)
 
3567 date & place of burial Gilbert, William (I8015)
 
3568 date & place of burial Tyrrell, Anne (I8026)
 
3569 date based on marriage Williams, Robert (I7557)
 
3570 date from Baum surname chart Baum, Johann Philipp (I773)
 
3571 date from gravestone Phelps, Sally (I6186)
 
3572 date from gravestone inscription, place from census Maxfield, Varnis (I5478)
 
3573 date from gravestone inscription, place from census Shultz, Mary (I5829)
 
3574 date from gravestone inscription, place from census Shultz, Daniel (I6143)
 
3575 date from Maser surname chart Baum, Johann Philipp (I773)
 
3576 date from tombstone Conklin, James E. (I4965)
 
3577 date not given Irish, William W (I5901)
 
3578 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I11262)
 
3579 date not proven Stanley, Robert (I2390)
 
3580 date of administration of estate Fitzrandolph, John (I6310)
 
3581 date of administration of estate Alsop, John (I8008)
 
3582 date of administration of estate Gilbert, Temperance (I8010)
 
3583 Date of birth appears to be incorrect. See his fathers will; in 1716 Daniel is appointed executor. Certainly he would be more than 9 years old then. Other children were listed as minors, but not Daniel. Phelps, Daniel (I5944)
 
3584 date of fathers will Fince, Nicholas (I8395)
 
3585 date of fathers will Sherman, Martha (I8451)
 
3586 date of fathers will Sherman, Mary (I8461)
 
3587 Date of his will & his wife's will Sherman, Henry (I7926)
 
3588 date of inventory Unknown, Mary (I7089)
 
3589 date of inventory Hathaway, John (I8427)
 
3590 date of inventory Sherman, Samuel (I8457)
 
3591 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I10643)
 
3592 date of probate Fox, Scott (I5420)
 
3593 date of probate Norbury, Thomas (I9534)
 
3594 date of probate inventory Sherman, Philip (I7516)
 
3595 date of will De Groot, Johannes (I7643)
 
3596 date of will Lanpheare, Richard (I8852)
 
3597 date of will Post, Gerritt (I8906)
 
3598 date of will & prove date Chase, Benjamin (I11314)
 
3599 date of will proven Fytche, Roger (I3842)
 
3600 date of will-date of probate Minard, Joel (I7916)
 

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