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Davids Family
ABRAHAM DAVIDS, parentage unknown, was born in the vicinity of Tarrytown, Westchester
County, N.Y. in 1774. About the year 1800 he brought his family down to New York City,
and continued to reside there until about 1812 when he moved to what is now Chelsea,
Duchess County, N.Y. He was the master of a sloop which sailed up and down the Hudson,
ran grocery stores in both Fishkill and New York, and later in life was a U.S. Customs
inspector in New York City. At one stage in his career he also ran the ferry between
Newburgh and what is now Beacon, N.Y. After his retirement he lived with his daughter
and son-in-law in Matteawan (now part of Beacon), N.Y., where he died Nov. 15, 1863
aged 89 years.
ABRAHAM DAVIDS married, about 1795, NANCY VAN WART of Tarrytown, daughter of Abraham and Mary (Youngs) Van Wart. She was born in Tarrytown about 1779 and died in Fishkill Landing, N.Y. July 28, 1849. The children of Abraham and Nancy Davids were:
HENRY VAN WART DAVIDS, son of Abraham and Nancy Davids, was born in New York City in 1803 and died in Fishkill Landing, N.Y. Feb 21, 1842. During his life he lived in both Fishkill and New York City. He was, like his father, the master of a Hudson River sloop, and also ran a grocery and worked as an inkmaker. The last few years of his life he was a dentist in Manhattan. HENRY VAN WART DAVIDS married, may 27, 1822, Maria Brinckerhoff of Fishkill. After her husband's death in 1842 she brought the family down to Norfolk, Virginia, but before 1860, she returned to Fishkill where she lived with her brother Daniel. She died in Norwalk, Connecticut on June 8, 1885. The children of Henry Van Wart and Maria Davids were:
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Brinckerhoff Family
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Van Wart Family
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Boice Family
Simon Boice (also spelled Boyce, Buys, Bice, Byce, etc.), parentage unknown, was born between 1745 and 1755. He married in 1775 to Mary, last name unknown. Mary was born May 2, 1753 and died at the home of Gerret Brinckerhoff, her son-in-law, on Mar 13, 1841. Simon Boice must have died sometime between 1790, when he appears in the Fishkill (N.Y.) census, and 1800, when his name drops from the rolls. In 1790 he is listed as the head of a family containing one male over 16 years (Simon himself), three males under 16 years, and five females. Except for the fact that he served in the Dutchess County militia during the Revolution, nothing else is known about him. The children of Simon and Mary Boice, so far as is known:
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Jim Downey also stated that an old Davids family bible may exist, and old records from the Cox and Brinckerhoff families were maintained by a descendent of Augustus Adams named Peter W. Streich.
Original copies of old Fishkill newspapers are apparently kept at the State Historical
Library in Madison, Wisconsin, and contain a wealth of obituaries and other data.
In a book [Montross, a Family History, Staunton, Virginia, 1958] and an article
[Origin of the Montross Family of New York Rec. 87, pg 67-76],
John Wilson described an immigrant Pierre Montross and his wife, Marguerite David, daughter
of Jean David and Esther Vincent, well-known Huguenots.
French-Canadian records, however, identify Marguerite's parents as
Guillaume David and Marie Armand,
and identify several of her siblings as ancestors of Tarrytown (NY) families.
Guillaume David, born about 1636, migrated to French Canada before 23 October 1657, when his son
was baptized at Trois-Rivières. Guillaume (English: "William") was married to Marie Armand about 1656, either at
Trois-Rivières (where there is no record) or elsewhere before migrating to Trois-Rivières.
They moved to Quebec City before 1659, then to New York by 1679 with several children. Marie
Armand likely did not have French origins (perhaps originally Marie Harmens). Their children:
Isaac's children were :
by Jim Hansen of the Wisconsin Historical Society (with credit to Jim Downey)
New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 122, October 1991 and vol. 123, January 1992
Charles married Antje (=Anna) Lent on 10 April 1706 at Tarrytown Dutch Church, where she had been
a member, and about this time, they changed their name to the more Dutch Davids. Their children :
This pair of articles is about 15 pages long.
Jim Downey felt that the last named Abraham (above in red) is either
the first-named Abraham at the top of Jim's 1981 summary of his research,
or this last Abraham (above) died as a young child, and the next child (born 1774) became the
first-named Abraham at the top of Jim's 1981 summary.