Abram DE LA MONTAGNE
Pedigree Resource File
Historical information included in notes. Note: The following information is obtained from Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com: ABRAM DE LA MONTAGNE, fourth son of Jan La Montagne, Jr., but oldest son of his second wife Maria Vermilye, was baptized on 16 March 1664 in the New Harlem Dutch Church. He was clearly named for his uncle Abram Vermilye who had been killed just months earlier in the relief of Wiltwyck. At the baptism, his sponsors were his uncle Willem de la Montagne, his grandmother Jacomina Jacobs (Vermilye), and Gerrit Van Trieht. Abram was just eight years old when his father died. He was apprenticed to be a weaver and must have been a good weaver, since he afterwards gave instruction in that craft to other young men of the town. He was the only son of Jan La Montagne, Jr., who stayed in New Harlem all of his life, farming and plying his craft. On 27 March 1689, he married Rebecca Van Huyse, daughter of Theunis Idens Van Huyse and his wife Jannetie Thyssen (Van Pelt). Theunis Van Huyse was the owner of a large farm in Harlem, along the North River between present-day 89th and 107th Street, a area which was known as Bloomingdale. Rebecca had been born at New Utrecht, probably about 1670. Theunis Van Huyse spent his early days on Long Island, although it is probable that he was born in Holland in 1639, the son of Ide Van Huyse and Teuntje Teunis of Nordingen. It seems likely that Ide Van Huyse died in Holland and Teuntje Teunis came to New Amsterdam as a widow. She married second husband Jacob Hellakers in New Amsterdam. Jacob Hellakers was a strong member of the Labadist movement, and Jasper Danckers and Peter Sluyter, Labadist travelers, stayed with Teuntje and Jacob Hellakers in 1679 in New York City. In his Journal Jasper Danckers described his hosts and their children. In his account of Theunis Idens, Dancker takes credit for reforming a reckless and irresponsible youth. Theunis became a member of the Dutch Church and of the Labadist movement on 17 June 1680 and thereafter became a pillar of the community. Abrams mother, Maria Vermilye, died just six months after Abrams marriage, leaving her house and lot in the village of Harlem to him. Abrams rights as a patentee of New Harlem were by virtue of this freehold and upon this he drew lot #23 in 1691, which was five morgen now within Manhattans Central Park. The west side of his grant lay next to the lands of his father-in-law, Theunis Van Huyse, and Abram added to his lands by judicious exchanges with Samuel Waldron and Barent Waldron. However, Abram evidently felt he also possessed the morgen right held by his father in the undivided common land, even though his father had sold his farm to Jan Louwe Bogert. Abram first raised the question in a letter to the Overseers of New Harlem in 1700, a letter that Bogert found so disturbing that he eventually sold the land. At last in 1723, the matter came to court and the court found against Abram. The town records of Harlem show that Abram was a constable in 1694, a collector in 1702, and surveyor of highways in 1704 and 1707. The census of 1703 of Harlem showed Abram [unfortunately transcribed as Saml instead of Abrm in the printed version of that census] with six sons and two daughters. In his old age, Theunis Van Huyse had his farm laid off in lots of 57 ? acres each, and he and Jannetie conveyed these parcels to their children, including Rebecca Delamontanie, giving possession by turf and twig on 22-23 June 1720. Rebecca must have died about 1725. After that date her sons left Harlem and scattered into New Jersey and upstate New York. In 1729 Abram sold his land to his brother-in-law, George Dyckman, who owned an adjoining part of the old Van Huyse farm. In 1733, Abram was still living, with a second wife Aeltje Hoogland. Abrams grave was in the old Harlem graveyard, beneath a rough stone inscribed A.L.M., 12 Feb 1733/34. No will has been found in New York or New Jersey for Abram, but there is a docket in the colonial papers of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, in which Isaac, Edward [Ide], and Joseph Montanye bring suit in 1744 against Matthew Benson of Hackensack, New Jersey, for debts owned to Abraham Montanye, in their capacity as executors of the last will and testament of said Abraham. Matthew Benson moved to Hackensack in 1731 from Harlem, while Abram was still alive. Since only two of Abrams children are recorded in the baptismal records of Harlem, it would be extremely helpful if we could find a copy of Abrahams last will and testament. Based on New Jersey records and patterns of family association, there are ten known children of Abram and Rebecca (Van Huyse) Delamontanie. This order of birth may not be correct but the place of these descendants in this family becomes more and more certain as evidence continues to mount. SOURCES OF INFORMATION: 1. Baptismal Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of New York City. New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 7(1876) 23; 13 (1882) 70, 169. 2. Bergen, Teunis G. Register in Alphabetical Order of the Early Settlers of Kings County, Long Island, New York. Polyanthos Reprint: 1973. 151, 301, 357. 3. Danckaerts, Jasper and Peter Sluyter, Journal of a Voyage to New York and a Tour in Several of the American Colonies in 1679-80. Brooklyn: 186 4. Docket #24467, Colonial New Jersey Supreme Court Records, New Jersey Archives, Trenton, New Jersey 5. Honeyman, A. Van Doren, ed. First Reformed Church, Raritan (Somerville) Baptisms; Translated and compared with Original Records, Somerset County Historical Quarterly 2 (1913) 214-217. 6. Janeway Account Books, Rutgers University Library, New Brunswick, New Jersey. 7. Rankin, Russell Bruce. Eighteenth Century Freeholders in New Jersey: Somerset County, Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey 17:90. 8. Randolph, Howard S.F. Teuntje Teunis and Her Descendants, Tracing the Families of Van Huyse, Van Schaick, DeNys, and Hellakers, New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 59 (1928) 4-16. 9. Riker, James. Harlem (City of New York): Its Origins and Early Annals. Privately printed, 1881. 521-525. 10. - - -. Revised History of New Harlem, Its Origins and Early Annals. New York, 1904. 591-597. 11. Stryker-Rodda, Kenn. The Janeway Account Books 1735-1746. The Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey, 33 (1958) 79.
Historical information included in notes. Note: The following information is obtained from Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com: JOSEPH DELAMONTANIE, son of Abram Delamontanie and his wife Rebecca Van Huyse, was born in Harlem, New York City, New York, between 1695 and 1700. Unfortunately, because there is no baptismal record to be found for this Joseph in the surviving records of the Reformed Dutch Church of New York, many descendants have followed red herrings and tried to make a case for being descended from other Joseph Montanyes of the same period for whom there are extant baptismal records. The other Josephs, however, lived and died in New York City. They have no descendants today. Joseph, son of Jan Montanye and Annetje Waldron, who married Margrietje Roll, disappears from the record books thereafter. Joseph, son of Jesse Montanye and Gerritje Yates, never married and died in New York City in January 1756, according to the records of the Reformed Dutch Church. Joseph Delamontanie, known in early New Jersey records as Yost Montanje, moved to the Peapack Patent of New Jersey around 1725, in company with brothers Teunis, Ide (Edward), and Nicholas. Both Edward and Joseph farmed land in the same general area, but Edwards land eventually was in Somerset County, while Josephs land was in Morris County. Teunis went into the shipping and importing business, while Nicholas is still a very shadowy figure, farming in Somerset County up through the 1740s but not found thereafter. However, they all appear as related men in the accounts of Jacob Janeway, storekeeper at Bound Brook, between 1735-1745. About 1731, Joseph married Maria Covert, daughter of Jan Teunissen Covert and Jeanne Brokaw, both from well-known Huguenot families of Newtown, Long Island, who became important landowners on the Peapack Patent. Maria Covert was baptized on 6 August 1706 in the Raritan RDC; witnesses were Cornelis and Neeltien Teunissen. There is no record of the marriage of Joseph and Maria, but the names of their children and their patterns of association make Marias identification quite certain. Their oldest child was baptized in 1732 in the North Branch (Readington) RDC, but the younger children were baptized at the Raritan (Somerville) RDC. There is no known birth record for the middle three children. Joseph was called Yost and Yeost in Andrew Johnstons Journals, published in the Somerset County Historical Quarterly. George Leslie of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, a proprietor of land on the Peapack Patent, leased 205 acres of land to Joseph Montanye in 1749 and eventually sold him the same land in 1753, after it was surveyed by Andrew Johnston. His closest neighbors were Peter, Bout, and Andries Wortman, while Andrew and Morris Bird were weavers who lived on his land. New Jersey Supreme Court Record #25222 is a complaint of trespass brought by Joseph Montanye at Roxbury, Morris County, New Jersey, on 23 March 1764, against Joseph Folkerson, who on 1 August 1763 did break and enter the property of Joseph Montanye and did take down and carry away twenty panels of Worm Fence worth ten pounds. David Ogden acted as attorney in the suit which asked for thirty pounds damages. Tax lists for 1779 and 1780 show Joseph, along with his sons John, Abraham, and Burgun, and his grandson Abraham Junior, in Roxbury Township, Morris County, New Jersey. Another son, Joseph, was taxed in Walpack Township, Sussex County, in 1773. Joseph died on 31 March 1788 in Roxbury Township, Morris County, New Jersey. His will was written on 11 March 1788 and is extracted as follows: Joseph Montanye of Roxbury Township, Morris County, will of: Son, Abraham, 1/7 of my lands. Son, John, 1/7. Son, Joseph, 1/7. Son, Bergon, 1/7. Daughter, Rebecca Schoonover, 1/7. Daughter, Jane Vanwey, 1/7. Grandchildren, children of son Isaac, deceased, 1/7. Executorsson Bergon and friend James Skinner. WitnessesLemuel Fordham, Peter Brown, William Woodhull. Proved 14 April 1788. Inventory 21 March 1788 for 204 pounds, 5 shillings, 10 pence, made by Peter Brown and Amos Leek. Lib. 31, p. 188. #707N. SOURCES OF INFORMATION: 1. First Reformed Church, Raritan (Somerville) Baptisms, Somerset County Historical Quarterly, 2:304; 3:57, 58. 2. Journals of Andrew Johnston, 1743-1754, Somerset County Historical Quarterly 2:186-187; 3:20,24; 4:40. 3. New Jersey Supreme Court Record #25222, Suit brought on 23 March 1764 by Joseph Montanye of Roxbury, Morris County, against Joseph Folkerson. 4. Stryker-Rodda, Kenn. The Janeway Account Books 1735-1746, The Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey, 33:1-4; 34:78-79. 5. Stryker-Rodda, Kenn New Jersey Rateables, The Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey, 40:143; 46:84-96; 52:84-85, 90-93; 53:35-40. 6. Stryker-Rodda, Kenn. Revolutionary Census of New Jersey; An Index Based on Rateables of the Inhabitants of New Jersey During the Period of the American Revolution. Cottonport, LA: 1972. 145. 7. Will of Joseph Montanye, written 11 March 1788, proved 14 April 1788. Executors: Bergon Montanye and James Skinner. New Jersey State Archives, Liber 707N.
He married Rebecca Van Huyse 27 Mar 1687 at Reformed Dutch Church, New York . Rebecca Van Huyse was born at New Utrecht, Long Island, New York Abt 1670 daughter of Theunis Idensen Van Huyse and Jannetie Thysse Van Pelt .
They were the parents of 9
children:
Maria De La Montagne
born Abt 1689.
Jannetie De La Montagne
born Abt 1691.
Johannes De La Montagne
christened 1 Oct 1693.
Teunis De La Montagne
born Abt 1695.
Isaac De La Montagne
born Abt 1697.
Ide De La Montagne
born Abt 1699.
Joseph Montanye
born Abt 1701.
Nicholas De La Montagne
born Abt 1706.
Hannah De La Montagne
born Abt 1708.
Abram De La Montagne died 12 Feb 1734 at New Harlem, New York City, New York .
Rebecca Van Huyse died Abt 1725 at New Harlem, New York City, New York .