Joseph MONTANYE

Birth:
Abt 1701
New Harlem, New York City, New York
Death:
31 Mar 1788
Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey
Marriage:
Abt 1730
Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey
Sources:
Internet IGI, Feb 2008
Pedigree Resource File
Ancestral File - nil
Notes:
                   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.
                  
Maria COVERT
Birth:
6 Aug 1706
Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey
Death:
Bef 1788
Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
1732
Somerset, New Jersey
Death:
1810
Supposedly in Cherry Valley, Otsego, New York
Marr:
Abt 1754
Morris, New York 
Notes:
                   Birth: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.
Marriage: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.
Death: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.
Note per Lois Stewart: This family has been extremely elusive in the records and the assignment of these children is speculative, based only on ages and geographical evidence. Abraham was named in records in Sussex County, New Jersey, up to about 1780, with a son Abraham Jr. According to DAR records, Abraham and Betsey moved to Otsego County, New York, thereafter, but they have not been found in the records of Otsego County. However, in the census of 1790 and thereafter, there are a number of Montanye families in Montgomery County, New York, largely in the Town of Mohawk and the Town of Glen, who have not been identified. It seems likely that they are part of the family of Abraham and Betsy, but proof is lacking
                  
2
Birth:
Abt 1734
Somerset, New Jersey
Death:
Bef 19 Oct 1802
Kingston, Luzerne, Pennsylvania
Marr:
Abt 1756
Morris, New York 
Notes:
                   Birth: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.
Marriage: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.
Death: Lois Stewart; Ancestry.com.

Note by Lois Stewart:  JOHN MONTANYE, second son of Joseph Montanye and his wife Maria Covert of Roxbury Township, Morris County, New Jersey, was born about 1734. Although Johns older brother Abraham was baptized in 1732 , no baptismal record has been found for John. He was undoubtedly named for his mothers father, Hans Covert of Bridgewater Township, Somerset County, New Jersey, just as his older brother was named for his fathers father, Abraham Delamontanie of Harlem, NY. His identity is certain because he was named in his fathers will , while his approximate date of birth has been determined both by naming patterns and by the date of birth of his oldest son.

John Montanye must have married Sarah Miller about 1756. Sarah Miller was the daughter of Andrew Miller, a Scot who moved to Basking Ridge, New Jersey, with a group of neighbors from Southold, Long Island. Other families in the Black River (Lamington) neighborhood included the Bird family and the Horton family, both of whom also became allied to John Montanye through marriage.

John and Sarah had nine children, all of them born in New Jersey. They were living in Roxbury Township, Morris County, NJ, for the tax lists of 1779 and 1780 , near Johns father Joseph Montanye and his brother Abraham, as well as near Abraham Montanye, Jr. (who is Johns oldest son, not son of his brother Abraham).

He was a soldier during the Revolutionary War, but his record for the DAR has been badly confused with that of John Montanye [SDJM #902] of Tappan, Orange County, NY. He is, instead, the John Montanye who served in the Morris County Militia . He was still living in Morris County, NJ, on 22 April 1783, when he signed a petition of Rev. War soldiers citing the high cost of living in New Jersey and strongly urging that the western lands [in Pennsylvania] be sold to settlers, thus helping the states finances and making western land available for settlement at the same time.

It is unfortunate that John Montanyes military service with the Morris County Militia is not listed in the Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War, although that of his son Abram is so listed, as well as those of his cousins Edward and Abraham Montanye of Somerset County, NJ. This may be one reason why the NSDAR has been reluctant to change its records. However, it is clear that the State of New Jersey does regard John Montanye of Morris County, NJ, as a Revolutionary War patriot.

John Montanye disappeared from Morris County tax records after 1783. He must have gone first to Virginia with his youngest brother Isaac, since John Montanye was listed once in Loudoun County, VA, with Isaac Montanye, between 1783 and 1787. The earliest record of his move to the Wyoming Valley, PA, was in 1787 when he was listed as a tailor, living in Wilkes-Barre.

He may have had to return to New Jersey several times, since he was the executor of the estate of his wifes brother-in-law Peter Wortman of Roxbury. That estate was not settled for several years. His father died in 1788, leaving him and Isaac the land adjoining the meadow ground below the house and adjoining the public highway, in Roxbury Township, Morris County, NJ. It seems likely that John gave or sold that land to his oldest son Abraham, who remained in New Jersey when all the rest of the family moved to Pennsylvania.

In 1796 John Montanye and his sons Joseph and Isaac were listed as taxpayers in Kingston township, Luzerne County, PA, and his son Andrew was a taxpayer in Exeter township, Luzerne County, PA.

John Montanye made his will in Kingston, Luzerne County, PA, on 21 September 1802, and it entered probate there on 19 October 1802. His wife Sarah survived him. His will mentioned his wife and named his children in this order: Abraham, Elizabeth, Rebecca, Andrew, Joseph, Mary, Jenny, Isaac, and Nancy. His son Andrew Montanye and son-in-law Samuel Carver were named with friend Philemon Clark as executors.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION, arranged in order of reference:
1. The Rev. B.V.D. Wyckoff, transcriber and translator. Readington Church Baptisms From 1720. Somerset County Historical Quarterly 4 (1915) 213. 23 April 1732 Abraham, son of Joseph and Marytje dla Montagne.
2. Will of Joseph Montanye, written 11 March 1788, Roxbury Township, Morris County, New Jersey. Probate Record #707N at New Jersey State Library, Trenton, New Jersey.
3. Frank J. Zaza. Some Miller Families of the western parts of northern New Jersey. Society of Descendants of Johannes de la Montagne Newsletter 12 (1994) 1123-1139. The seven children of Andrew Miller of Black River, NJ, were Barbara Miller, Andrew Miller, Sarah Miller Montanye, Mary Miller Wortman, John Miller, Grace Miller Ogden, Joanna Miller Rush.
4. Will of Andrew Miller, written 6 May 1775, Roxbury Township, Morris County, New Jersey. Probate Record #366N at New Jersey State Library, Trenton, New Jersey. Miller named his daughter Sarah and his grandson Andrew Metane in the will.
5. Concerning Lots in Peapack Patent; Journals of Andrew Johnston, 1743-1754. Somerset County Historical Quarterly 2 (1913) 186-188. Andrew Johnston was a surveyor hired to survey the lots in the Peapack Patent. In 1753 he assessed Joseph Montanyes land and noted thatAndrew Burd [Bird] and Morris Burd, Peter Rush, John Smyth, John Evilland, Josia Clawson, David Ogden, Elisha Drake, Derrick Wortman, Folker Folkerson, had lots in the same neighborhood. These are all names allied to this branch of the Montanyes.
6. Kenn Stryker-Rodda. New Jersey Rateables, 1778-1780; Morris County, Roxbury Township, March 1779 and February 1780. Genealogical Magazine of New Jersey 46 (1971) 91-92.
7. Kenneth W. Richards, Head of New Jersey State Library. Statement authenticating the Military Record of John Montanye of Mendham or Roxbury, Morris County, New Jersey. Trenton, New Jersey, 1973.
8. The petition is Revolutionary War Manuscript #10719, New Jersey State Archives, Trenton, NJ, being a petition from Revolutionary War veterans, signed at Mendham, Morris County, New Jersey, on 22 April 1783. Note other signatures include John Montanyes son-in-law John Horton.
9. William S. Stryker, Adjutant General. Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War, Compiled Under Orders of His Excellency Theodore F. Randolph, Governor. Trenton, NJ: New Jersey Legislature, 1872. Facsimile Reprint published by Heritage Books, Bowie, Maryland, in 1993. 692.
10. Will of John Montanye of Luzerne County, PA, written 21 September 1802, entered probate 10 October 1802. Luzerne County Probate Book A, page 44.
11. Kari Mohn, Kenai, Alaska, is a descendant of Philemon Clark. She has proved that his wife was Elizabeth Chandler, b. 9 July 1780. The information in the Michael Shoemaker book is wrong in identifying Elizabeth, daughter of John Montanye, as wife of Philemon Clark.
12. William T. Blair, The Michael Shoemaker Book, Scranton, PA: J.I. Shoemaker, 1924. 721-725. There are three mistakes in the information in this book on the family of John Montanye, although the bulk of the information seems to be correct even if incomplete. The three mistakes are as follows: first, John Montanyes place of origin was not Orange County, NY, but Roxbury, Morris County, NJ; second, Philemon Clark was not his son-in-law but a friend; third, Johns daughter Elizabeth was the wife of Joseph Moss.
13. William Nelson. New Jersey Marriage Records 1665-1800. Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series, volume XXII. Paterson, NJ: State of New Jersey, 1900. Facsimile reprint by Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore, MD, 1997. 199, 266.
14. John Michael, Genealogy of the Montanye Family, unpublished manuscript written at Oxford, Ohio, in 1975. This manuscript starts with the family of Abraham and Margaret Henderson Montanye and is a compilation of their descendants. John Michaels current address is 5300 Hamilton Avenue #203, Chincinnati, OH 45224-3152.
                  
3
Birth:
1738
Somerset, New Jersey
Death:
14 Nov 1805
Hardwick, Sussex, New Jersey
Marr:
Abt 1765
Morris, New Jersey 
Notes:
                   Birth: Lois Stewart's letter Nov. 1992 to Sussex County, NJ Historical Society and E-mail 11/24/03 from Lois Stewart.
Marriage: Lois Stewart's letter Nov. 1992 to Sussex County, NJ Historical Society and E-mail 11/24/03 from Lois Stewart.
Death:  E-mail 11/24/03 from Lois Stewart.
Note: This Rebecca Montanye is the sister of the Joseph Montanye who married Sarah Schoonhoven.
                  
4
Birth:
Abt 1740
Morris, New York
Death:
Abt 1809
Owego, Tioga, New York
Marr:
Abt 1769
Sussex, New Jersey 
5
Birth:
3 Jul 1743
Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey
Death:
Bef 12 Dec 1785
Shelburne Parish, Loudoun, Virginia
Marr:
Abt 1779
VA 
Notes:
                   Note by Lois Stewart: Isaac MONTANYE, the son of Joseph Montanye and his wife Maria Covert of Roxbury, Morris County, New Jersey, moved to Loudoun County, Virginia, in the summer of 1780. It seems likely that he left Morris County earlier, since he was not listed there for the 1779 and 1780 tax lists, as reported by Kenn Stryker-Rodda. He was not on the tax list of Loudoun County in the spring of 1780, but he had acquired land by the early spring of 1781. He settled in Shelburne Parish, which was in the southwestern portion of Loudoun County. He continued to be taxed there through 1785, when he had two horses and four cows.

On 12 December 1785 his widow appeared in court as Anna Mary Montanye, widow and relict of Isaac Montanye dec'd, to obtain the letters of administration of his estate, with James Craig and Thomas Mount as her securities for the bond. On 12 June 1786 the inventory and appraisal of the estate of Isaac Montanye dec'd was returned to court and recorded. In addition to his widow, others were mentioned in the settlement of the estate, most notable was a note due from his brothers Abraham and Bergon Montawney from 9 October 1782. Isaac and Charles Vanwhy, who had cash in hand, were probably sons of his sister Jane Vanwey.[Inventory Book C:210-211]

In May 1786 Mary Montony was taxed for one horse and two cows in the same district where Isaac had been. She was again listed in 1787 and that was the last time she appeared using that name. Two of Isaac's children were bound out in October 1788. It was ordered that the Overseers of the Poor bind according to law Joseph Montawney, eight years old, to David Reese who is to learn him the trade of a millwright; the next entry was for the Overseers of the Poor to bind Bergon Montawney to Nicholas Merrill. The youngest son, Isaac, born in 1785, was clearly too young to be taken from his mother. As there is no further mention in the court records of those two older boys, they must have satisfactorily completed their indentures.

After their bind orders, there is no further mention of Joseph or Burr Montanye in the Loudoun County records until their marriages. Burr Montonyn entered into a marriage bond on 9 November 1802 to wed Charity Oldacre in Fauquier County, VA. In Loudoun County, VA, a bond was recorded on 17 December 1803 for the marriage of Joseph Montaney to Mary Hilburn [Milburn].

Mary Montony/Montanye bought 25 acres from William Sudduth in May 1787 [Loudoun County Deed Book Q:212]; this land lay on the NW Fork of Goose Creek and was very near the Loudoun/Fauquier County line.

Given that Isaac and Anna Mary's eldest son was born in 1780, this clearly suggests that Isaac and Mary were married before their arrival in Loudoun County. Anna Mary's parentage might be found in Northampton County, PA. There may have been more than one reason why Isaac and Anna Mary 's son Burr [short for Bergon] moved later in life to Smithfield Twp., of Northampton County, PA.

While no out-conveyance of the Sudduth land is indexed under Mary Montanye's name, a search of the land taxes and deed books shows that in 1791 James and Mary Jack sold to Joseph Carr, a Merchant, a certain tract of land which Mary Montony bought of William Sudduth containing 25 acres. This seems to clearly suggest that the widowed Anna Mary Montanye married James Jack, probably in late 1787 or early 1788, since Mary was not taxed in 1788 but James Jack was. About 1805 James Jack moved to Harrison County, West Virginia, and in 1817 to Monongalia County, West Virginia. The 1830 Census shows James Jack, age 80-90, and his wife, age 70-80. There is no way of knowing for sure if this wife was Anna Mary Montoney, but the assumption is made that she was still living in 1830.
                  
6
Birth:
22 Apr 1746
Peapack Patent, Somerset, New Jersey
Death:
22 Aug 1825
Utica, Licking, Ohio
Marr:
Abt 1787
Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey 
7
Jane MONTANYE
Birth:
1749
Morris, New York
Death:
 
Marr:
 
FamilyCentral Network
Joseph Montanye - Maria Covert

Joseph Montanye was born at New Harlem, New York City, New York Abt 1701. His parents were Abram De La Montagne and Rebecca Van Huyse.

He married Maria Covert Abt 1730 at Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey . Maria Covert was born at Bridgewater, Somerset, New Jersey 6 Aug 1706 daughter of Hans Theunis Covert and Jannetje Brokaw .

They were the parents of 7 children:
Abraham Montanye born 1732.
John Montanye born Abt 1734.
Rebecca Montanye born 1738.
Joseph Montanye born Abt 1740.
Isaac Montanye born 3 Jul 1743.
Burgon Montanye born 22 Apr 1746.
Jane Montanye born 1749.

Joseph Montanye died 31 Mar 1788 at Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey .

Maria Covert died Bef 1788 at Roxbury, Morris, New Jersey .