Goosen Van Noort

M
     Goosen married Maria Peeck, daughter of Jan Peeck and Maria du Trieux, before 1686 at Albany, Albany County, New York.
     Goosen Van Noort was also known as Goosen Van Oort.

Jean de Rapalje

M, b. 1569

Relationship=10th great-grandfather of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=9th great-grandfather of David Kipp Conover.
      Jean de Rapalje was born circa 1552. He was born in 1569 at Antwerp, Belgium. Jean married Elizabeth Baudoin circa 1577.
     



The fraudulent Coligny-Rapalje descent
by John Blythe Dobson
The early history of the Rapalje family of New Netherland has been distorted to an extraordinary degree. It is marred with absurd etymologies, such as the derivation of the name from Rapallo in Italy1; with preposterous folklorizations, such as the story of Governor Minuit presenting Catalyntje Trico with a cow in compensation for having stolen a dumpling from her kitchen2; and with dubious artifacts, such as an unlikely coat of arms.3 Less innocent in nature is an atrocious invention published in Jerome B. Holgate’s American Genealogy. This work derives the Rapalje family from an alleged

Gaspard Colet de Rapalje … born in France, at Châtillon, sur Loire, in 1505…. He married the daughter of Victor Antonie Janssen, a sign and house painter of Antwerp, by whom he had three children, Gaspard Coligne de Rapalje, Abram Colet de Rapalje, and a daughter named Breckje. Breckje married her cousin, Victor Honorius Janssen, in 1569, by whom she had one son, Abram Janssen, who is said to have been an historical painter of considerable eminence. Abram Janssen married, June 13th, 1594, a daughter of Hans Lodewyck, of Amsterdam, by whom he had three sons, William Janssen de Rapalje, Joris Janssen de Rapalje, and Antonie van Salers [sic].4 This account, drastically condensed in the extracts above, is so ridiculous that it would hardly seem worth mentioning, had it not deceived hosts of subsequent writers.5 Meanwhile, knowledgeable genealogists have been 5(...continued)

“Some Ancestors of the Rappleye [sic] Family,” Utah Genealogical Magazine, 28 (1937): 9-13; John Albert Bogart, The Bogart family: Tunis Gysbert Bogaert and his descendants (Scranton, Pennsylvania, 1959), p. 91. Miller, as pointed out by Allaben (see below), created additional chronological difficulties by assigning Joris Rapalje a wildly incorrect birthdate of 1572 (he was really born in 1604). Henry Wyckoff, in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 43 (1912): 303, while seemingly accepting the basic premise of the pedigree, objected to the notion of the surname Rapalje descending through a female line; but given Dutch naming practices, there is in fact nothing impossible in such an occurrence.

1 This statement appears in the privately-published work of a living writer, whom we should prefer not to embarrass.
2 Nathaniel S. Prime, A History of Long Island (New York, 1845), p. 360.
3 Although we have not traced explicit evidence early than America Heraldica, ed. E. de V. Vermont (New York, 1886), 176, that the arms of azure, three bar or were claimed by American Rapaljes, they must already have been in use in the U.S. at an earlier date, in order for them to have received the imprimatur of inclusion in J.B. Rietstap, Armorial Général, 2nd ed. (Gouda, 1884), 2:524. They also appear in Margherita Arlina Hamm, Famous Families of New York (New York, 1902), 2:61, where however the tinctures are not represented literally, and in Wilfred Jordan, Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania (New York), 1942, facing p. 198.

4 American Genealogy, being a history of some of the early settlers of North America and their descendants (Albany, dated “1848” in the imprint but containing later dates in the text), pp. 16-21. Frank L. Wagnen, in The Ancestry of Garret Conrad Van Wagnen (Buffalo, 1946), 65, incorrectly attributes the statement that “Joris Jansen Rapalje, the progenitor of the family in America, was one of three sons of Abraham Janssen (a Flemish painter)” to an earlier work, Prime’s History of Long Island (1845), previously cited, 357-62. In fact, Prime’s work makes no mention whatsoever of the father of Joris Jansen Rapalje.

5 For example America Heraldica, above-cited, 176; Charles Kingsbury Miller, Historic Families of America: William Almy of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, 1630, Joris Janssen de Rapaljé of Fort Orange (Albany), New Amsterdam and Brooklyn, 1623 (Chicago, 1897), pp. 92-100, 130-32; Peter Ross, A History of Long Island, from its earliest settlement to the present time (New York, 1902), 18; William Pelletreau, A History of Long Island, 2 vols. (1903), 17-23, 96-98, 228-29 (not personally seen); Raymon Meyers Tingley, Some Ancestral Lines; being a record of some of the ancestors of Guilford Solon Tingley and his wife Martha Pamelia Meyers (Rutland, Vermont, 1935), at pp. 296-301; James E. Gibson,
(continued...)

6 James Riker, Jr., The Annals of Newtown (New York, 1852), 266-67 n.

7 Frank Allaben, The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall (New York, 1908), 269-72, 276.

8 George E. McCracken, “Catalyntje Trico Rapalje,” The American Genealogist 35 (1959): 193-202, at p.
193.

9 The date given by Holgate is so nearly 50 years too early that, if it was not intentionally shifted as a distraction, it may perhaps have resulted from misreading a date written in Roman numerals, a change from M.D.LIV (1554) to M.D.V (1505) being possible with the dropping of two adjacent characters. Holgate surely cannot have intended his account to begin with the boy’s father, the elder Gaspard de Coligny, born in 1519, whose family was much too well known for the insinuation of a different wife and children to pass undetected. rebutting, or at least rejecting, it almost from the moment of its first appearance. In 1852 James Riker declared that it “contains very serious mistakes,” and specifically repudiated the assertion “that Joris de Rapalie and Antony Jansen van Salee, of Gravesend, were brothers.”6 In 1908 Frank Allaben remarked that its author did not appear “to be familiar with the significance of old Dutch names,” and characterized its statements as “loose and credulous.”7 In 1959 George E. McCracken briefly dismissed it as “fantastic.”8 These authors perhaps assumed that having demonstrated the onomastic vagaries, the risible social pretensions, and the jejune grasp of European
history in Holgate’s narrative, their work was done. And so it should have been, for it is the burden of those who would advance a theory to defend it. Yet there is no end to the folly which thrives only because it cannot be positively disproved. It is thus a rare satisfaction to the student of these matters when such frivolity can be clearly traced to a source, and revealed not just as a falsehood, but as an intentional fabrication. We hope to convince the reader that such a conclusion is possible in the present case.

To this end, we introduce what is possibly the most damning evidence against this pedigree which could possibly exist, to wit, a statement made by the father of this so-called “Gaspard Colet de Rapalje.” Despite the coy alternation between the surnames Colet and Coligne in the passage quoted above, every reader of the description of “Gaspard” by Holgate seems to have assumed — as was surely its author’s intention — that this man was in some way connected with the great house of Coligy; and there can be little doubt that our author, or possibly some venal informant, harvested the material from an account of Gaspard de Coligny, the younger, who was in fact born in 1554 (not 1505) at Châtillon.9 But the boy’s father records him as dying in his 14th or 15th year! Here is the complete extract:
Le XXVIII de Septembre, M.D.LIV. fut né un Vendredy Gaspar de Coligny mon fils à Chastillon, à six heures du soir. Il mourut en la ville d’Orléans l’an M.D.LXVIII. aux seconds troubles de ce Royaume: Et avait esté accordé avec Mademoiselle de Soubise. (The 28th of September, 1554, was born on a Friday Gaspar de Coligny my son, at Châtillon, at six in the evening. He died at the 10 “La famille de Coligny,” Bulletin de la Societé de l’histoire du protestantisme français, 1 (1853): 274-76. Armida Sharpin, Rapelje Rasters: A Genealogy (Valparaiso, Indiana: privately published, 1994), pp. 3-5, gives a summary of
this record in English, without indicating the original source, and with a slightly different date of death for the son Gaspard, whom she does not attempt to equate with the Gaspard whom Holgate claims was born in 1505. 11 No less an authority than James Riker was occasionally the victim of bad advice, and an interesting account of the attempted extortion of an American researcher by an unnamed “former Archivist at The Hague” is given in A. Van Doren Honeyman, Joannes Nevius … and His Descendants (Plainfield, N.J., 1900), pp. 40-41. We would not however wish to be understood as uggesting that such experiences were typical; and the situation certainly improved with the increased professionalization of archival science toward the end of the century. 12 Charles Augustus Fernald, Universal International Genealogy and of the Ancient Fernald Families (1909), as summarized by Walter Goodwin Davis, The Ancestry of Joseph Waterhouse (Portland, Maine, 1949), pp. 35-37, reprinted in Massachusetts and Maine Families in the Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis, ed. Gary Boyd Roberts, 3 vols. (Baltimore, 1996), 1:535-37, where attention is drawn to the passage in the editor’s introduction, at p. xviii. 13 In the words of Davis, with which we heartily concur. village of Orléans, in the year 1568, during the second troubles of this Kingdom, having been promised [in matrimony] to Mademoiselle de Soubise.)10 Although this record may still have been unpublished when Holgate’s account of the Rapalje family was published, it seems very likely that the author of the account had seen it, and falling upon the name of a youth whose life had ended at adolescence, foisted upon him an adult career and family which could not be refuted by the emergence of contrary facts. The invented dates in Holgate’s account indicate that it is not merely some gross misconception, but a deliberate and audacious concoction, replete with fake source material. But possibly Holgate was the dupe of some unscrupulous contact in Europe — as were others of his countrymen during that century — and was himself guilty only of an astonishing lack of acumen.11 It should be obvious from the foregoing remarks that any reference to descent from the Colignys must be expunged from the history of the Rapaljes. The claim is a disgusting blemish in the literature of New Netherlands genealogy. Yet not only has it been repeated ad nauseum, but it may well have inspired the bizarre assertion in the 1909 Fernald genealogy that “Dr. Jean Furnius Fernel, our ancestor … married Annietta de Coligny, daughter of Gaspard de Coligny, Admiral of France and firm Huguenot, who … made an otherwise unrecorded voyage to America.”12 As no daughter “Annieta” is mentioned in the Admiral’s own record of his family, she is of course as mythical as the Rapalje’s ancestor “Gaspard.” Apart from the difference that the writer of the Fernald genealogy was “undeniably insane,”13 this product of the early twentieth century has its stylistic
roots firmly planted in the nineteenth; and with its waffling as to the surname Furnius/Fernel, it could hardly be a closer parallel with the fraudulent Coligny-Rapalje descent. It was perhaps predictable that the murdered Admiral, a consummate example of the aristocratic underdog, should hold a peculiar and enduring fascination for depraved or deranged pedigree-makers. But capable genealogists, who do not wish their discipline to be the laughing-stock of historians, keep their wishful thinking in check, and have enough respect for the great figures of history not to appropriate them in so unseemly a manner.
Before leaving this sorry matter, it may be asked why anyone would go to the trouble of inventing such a story as the Coligny-Rapalje descent, while leaving in plain sight the clues for its unmasking, such as the mention of the place-name Châtillon. Ironically, the ambiguity as to the surname Colet/Coligne, which to its author may 14 This combination of traits has been noted in another type of literary fraud artist by Thomas Mallon, Stolen Words: Forays into the Origins and Ravages of Plagiarism (Harmondsworth, Middlesex, 1989). 15 John Blythe Dobson, “The spurious articles in Appleton’s Cyclopaedia of American Biography — some new discoveries and considerations,” Biography (Honolulu), 16 (1993): 388-408, esp. pp. 395-98. The frauds were first exposed in 1909. have seemed a safeguard against detection, is for the critic one of the surest signs of its suspicious character. While perhaps a problem for the psychiatrist rather than the historian, one might suggest that this mixture of arrogance and ambivalence is a typical characteristic of the forger’s psyche, containing a flamboyant aspect (which thrills at the risk of exposure) at war with a surreptitious aspect (which seeks to obfuscate the crime).14 In this regard, we cannot help but be struck by the parallels with a case we had occasion to study a number of years ago; namely that of the infamous Appleton’s Cyclopaedia of American Biography forgeries perpetrated during the 1880s, many of which contain deliberate and flagrant hints of their spuriousness. The forger extracted entire articles from a well-known French biographical dictionary, which were adapted into English, and, with few changes except to the life-dates of the subjects, submitted as the products of original research to an unsuspecting editor, who published them in volume after volume over a period of several years. Not only did these inventions retain distinctive details of the original subjects’ careers, but they appeared under such rare surnames as Houdetot, Iselin, Inchofer (printed as Imhofer), and Ingenhousz (printed as Ingenhous), with the minor departures from the spellings in the authentic source-material being suggestive of simple misprints rather than of calculated attempts at furthering the deception. Inevitably, the frauds were noticed within a generation of their appearance, and by 1936 a convincing identification of the forger had been made in print, conceivably while he still alive. Yet the forger, who was never prosecuted, had the last laugh, as by then his productions had already been copied into other reference works, as they would continue to be into the 1960s.15 Much of the literature on genealogical fraud seems to suffer from two somewhat restrictive assumptions: first, that these frauds are typically contrived for some definite and rational purpose, such as to bolster a claim to an estate; and secondly, that they are apt to be constructed in the most plausible and inconspicuous manner commensurate with such a purpose. Such assumptions underestimate both the multifarious vanities by which a forger (or a wealthy client) may be motivated, and the degree of ostentatiousness which may be present in the result. Readers of genealogical writings must be unusually wary of being seduced by exotica. We must resist the temptation of believing that something is too improbable to have been invented.

Copyright 2005 John Blythe Dobson. Permission to reproduce is granted if not for profit or commercial advantage, and if the original work is properly cited.Author’s e-mail address: jdobson (at) uwinnipeg (dot) ca. Cite as: John Blythe Dobson, “The fraudulent Coligny-Rapalje descent,” Annals of Genealogical Research Vol. 2, No.



Jean de Rapalje was also known as Jean Raparlier. He was also known as Jean Rapareilliet. He was also known as Arram Van Nuyssen Janssen.

Children of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin

Elizabeth Baudoin

F

Relationship=10th great-grandmother of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=9th great-grandmother of David Kipp Conover.
     Elizabeth married Jean de Rapalje circa 1577.
     Elizabeth Baudoin was also known as (Unknown) Loedwick.

Children of Elizabeth Baudoin and Jean de Rapalje

Jehenne Rapareille

F, b. 1 Aug 1578
Jehenne Rapareille|b. 1 Aug 1578|p153.htm#i95684|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover.
     Jehenne Rapareille was baptized on 1-Aug-1578 at Valenciennes, Nord, France. She was the daughter of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.

Marie Rapareille

F, b. 28 Jul 1580
Marie Rapareille|b. 28 Jul 1580|p153.htm#i95685|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover.
     Marie Rapareille was baptized on 28-Jul-1580 at Valenciennes, Nord, France. She was the daughter of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.

Jeanne Rapaille

F, b. 19 Dec 1590
Jeanne Rapaille|b. 19 Dec 1590|p153.htm#i95686|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover.
      Jeanne Rapaille was born on 19-Dec-1590 at Conde-Sur-L'Escaut, Nord, France. She was the daughter of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.

Oliver Rapeilliet

M, b. 28 Feb 1594
Oliver Rapeilliet|b. 28 Feb 1594|p153.htm#i95687|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover.
     Oliver Rapeilliet was baptized on 28-Feb-1594 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. He was the son of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.
     Oliver Rapeilliet was also known as Oliver Rapareillet.

Anne Rapeilliet

F, b. 17 Sep 1595
Anne Rapeilliet|b. 17 Sep 1595|p153.htm#i95688|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover.
     Anne Rapeilliet was baptized on 17-Sep-1595 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. She was the daughter of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.
     Anne Rapeilliet was also known as Anne Rapareillet.

Francois Rapareillet

M, b. 5 Nov 1596
Francois Rapareillet|b. 5 Nov 1596|p153.htm#i95689|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover.
     Francois Rapareillet was baptized on 5-Nov-1596 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. He was the son of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.
     Francois Rapareillet was also known as Francois Rapareillet.

Nicholas Rapareillet

M, b. 10 Jul 1598
Nicholas Rapareillet|b. 10 Jul 1598|p153.htm#i95690|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover.
     Nicholas Rapareillet was baptized on 10-Jul-1598 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. He was the son of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.

Jean Rapareillet

M, b. before 16 Nov 1600
Jean Rapareillet|b. before 16 Nov 1600|p153.htm#i95691|Jean de Rapalje|b. 1569|p153.htm#i95682|Elizabeth Baudoin||p153.htm#i95683|||||||||||||

Relationship=9th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover.
      Jean Rapareillet was born before 16-Nov-1600 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. Jean was buried on 16-Nov-1600 at St. Nicholas R. C. Church, Valenciennes, Nord, France. He was the son of Jean de Rapalje and Elizabeth Baudoin.

Jan Van Dyke

M, b. 19 Nov 1682, d. 18 Dec 1764
Jan Van Dyke|b. 19 Nov 1682\nd. 18 Dec 1764|p153.htm#i95694|Jan Janse Van Dyke|b. 1648/49\nd. circa 1736|p93.htm#i38073|Tryntje Thyssen Van Pelt|b. 1646\nd. 1725|p93.htm#i38072|Jan T. Van Dyke|b. circa 1605\nd. 1673|p153.htm#i95701|Tryntje Achias||p153.htm#i95702|Mathias Laen|b. 12 Apr 1618\nd. circa 1677|p92.htm#i38059|Maryken Gijsberts|d. 1663|p92.htm#i38060|

Relationship=1st cousin 8 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=1st cousin 7 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
     Jan Van Dyke was baptized on 19-Nov-1682. He was the son of Jan Janse Van Dyke and Tryntje Thyssen Van Pelt. Jan married Annetje Verkirk, daughter of Roelof Janse Verkerk and Catherine Simons, on 5-Jun-1706. Jan Van Dyke died on 18-Dec-1764 at Rocky Hill, Somerset County, New Jersey, at age 82.
     He was also known as Jan Van Dyck. He resided at at Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, New Jersey, in 1706.

Child of Jan Van Dyke and Annetje Verkirk

Annetje Verkirk

F, b. 13 Jan 1684, d. 27 Jun 1754
Annetje Verkirk|b. 13 Jan 1684\nd. 27 Jun 1754|p153.htm#i95695|Roelof Janse Verkerk|b. 6 Jun 1654|p254.htm#i136485|Catherine Simons|b. 1656\nd. circa 1718|p254.htm#i136486|Jan J. Verkerk|b. circa 1628\nd. 1688|p254.htm#i136493|Mayke Gisberts|b. before 1640\nd. 1688|p254.htm#i136494|||||||

Relationship=6th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover.
     Annetje Verkirk was baptized on 13-Jan-1684 at Dutch Reformed Church, Flatbush, Kings County, New York. She was the daughter of Roelof Janse Verkerk and Catherine Simons. Annetje Verkirk was born on 20-Jan-1683/84 at New Utrecht, Kings County, New York. Annetje married Jan Van Dyke, son of Jan Janse Van Dyke and Tryntje Thyssen Van Pelt, on 5-Jun-1706. Annetje Verkirk died on 27-Jun-1754 at Rocky Hill, Somerset County, New Jersey, at age 70.
     She was also known as Anna Verkerk.

Child of Annetje Verkirk and Jan Van Dyke

Jan Thomasse Van Dyke

M, b. circa 1605, d. 1673
      Jan Thomasse Van Dyke was born circa 1605 at Netherlands. Jan married Tryntje Achias circa 1638. Jan Thomasse Van Dyke died in 1673.
     He immigrated in 1652 to New Amsterdam, New York County, New York.

Children of Jan Thomasse Van Dyke and Tryntje Achias

Tryntje Achias

F
      Tryntje Achias was born circa 1638 at Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands. Tryntje married Jan Thomasse Van Dyke circa 1638.
     Tryntje Achias was also known as Tryntje Achias Haegen.

Children of Tryntje Achias and Jan Thomasse Van Dyke

Achias Van Dyke

M, d. circa 1707
Achias Van Dyke|d. circa 1707|p153.htm#i95707|Jan Thomasse Van Dyke|b. circa 1605\nd. 1673|p153.htm#i95701|Tryntje Achias||p153.htm#i95702|||||||||||||
     Achias Van Dyke was the son of Jan Thomasse Van Dyke and Tryntje Achias. Achias married Jannetie Lamberts circa 1673. Achias married Magdeleena Henderse in Dec-1693. Achias Van Dyke died circa 1707.
     He was also known as Achias Van Dyck. He was also known as Agyas Van Dyck.

Jannetie Lamberts

F
     Jannetie married Achias Van Dyke, son of Jan Thomasse Van Dyke and Tryntje Achias, circa 1673.
     Jannetie Lamberts was also known as Jannetje Lambert.

Magdeleena Henderse

F
     Magdeleena married Cornelius Vonck before 27-Aug-1668. Magdeleena married Minne Johannes on 1-Apr-1689. Magdeleena married Achias Van Dyke, son of Jan Thomasse Van Dyke and Tryntje Achias, in Dec-1693.
     Magdeleena Henderse was also known as Magdalena Hendrixc. She was also known as Magdalena Rixe. She was also known as Magdalena Hendricks.

Child of Magdeleena Henderse and Cornelius Vonck

Samuel Wight

M, b. 5 Feb 1639, d. 21 Dec 1716
Samuel Wight|b. 5 Feb 1639\nd. 21 Dec 1716|p153.htm#i95723|Deacon Thomas Wight|b. 6 Dec 1607\nd. 17 Mar 1674|p143.htm#i87826|Alice Roundy|b. 1608\nd. 15 Jul 1665|p143.htm#i87827|Robert Wight|b. 1578\nd. 8 Jan 1617/18|p143.htm#i87832|Elizabeth Fullshaw|d. 16 Jun 1620|p143.htm#i87833|||||||

Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granduncle of Virginia Ailene Swift.
      Samuel Wight was born on 5-Feb-1639 at Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. He was the son of Deacon Thomas Wight and Alice Roundy. Samuel Wight was baptized on 15-Jul-1640 at Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. He died on 21-Dec-1716 at Medfield, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, at age 77.

Ephraim Wight

M, b. 27 Jan 1645, d. 26 Feb 1722/23
Ephraim Wight|b. 27 Jan 1645\nd. 26 Feb 1722/23|p153.htm#i95724|Deacon Thomas Wight|b. 6 Dec 1607\nd. 17 Mar 1674|p143.htm#i87826|Alice Roundy|b. 1608\nd. 15 Jul 1665|p143.htm#i87827|Robert Wight|b. 1578\nd. 8 Jan 1617/18|p143.htm#i87832|Elizabeth Fullshaw|d. 16 Jun 1620|p143.htm#i87833|||||||

Relationship=8th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granduncle of Virginia Ailene Swift.
      Ephraim Wight was born on 27-Jan-1645 at Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. He was the son of Deacon Thomas Wight and Alice Roundy. Ephraim Wight died on 26-Feb-1722/23 at Medfield, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, at age 78.

Abigail Rockwood

F, d. 26 Dec 1696
     Abigail married Joshua Wight, son of Thomas Wight Jr. and Mehitable Cheney, on 20-Nov-1696 at Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts. Abigail Rockwood died on 26-Dec-1696 at Medfield, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.

Joshua Wight

M, b. 20 Oct 1708, d. 14 Aug 1762
Joshua Wight|b. 20 Oct 1708\nd. 14 Aug 1762|p153.htm#i95726|Joshua Wight|b. 25 Jul 1679|p132.htm#i73538|Elizabeth Spowell|b. circa 1678\nd. 15 Mar 1765|p132.htm#i73539|Thomas Wight Jr.|b. 1629\nd. 25 Sep 1690|p142.htm#i87820|Mehitable Cheney|b. 1 Jun 1643\nd. 1693|p142.htm#i87821|William Spowell|b. 18 Jan 1654/55|p196.htm#i104781||||

Relationship=6th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=5th great-granduncle of Virginia Ailene Swift.
      Joshua Wight was born on 20-Oct-1708 at Windham, Windham County, Connecticut. He was the son of Joshua Wight and Elizabeth Spowell. Joshua married Elizabeth (Unknown) on 4-Jul-1728 at Windham, Windham County, Connecticut. Joshua Wight died on 14-Aug-1762 at Windham, Windham County, Connecticut, at age 53.

Tryphena Kingsley

F, b. 16 Jul 1771, d. 1812
Tryphena Kingsley|b. 16 Jul 1771\nd. 1812|p153.htm#i95760|Salmon Kingsley|b. 27 Sep 1723\nd. 17 Feb 1813|p8.htm#i582|Lydia Burgess|b. 18 Apr 1724\nd. circa 1811|p8.htm#i583|Ezra Kingsley|b. 10 Dec 1698\nd. 8 Apr 1759|p6.htm#i317|Elizabeth Wight|b. 17 Oct 1703\nd. 19 Mar 1735|p6.htm#i320|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|

Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=3rd great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=4th cousin 5 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
      Tryphena Kingsley was born on 16-Jul-1771 at Windham, Windham County, Connecticut. She was the daughter of Salmon Kingsley and Lydia Burgess. Tryphena married Issac Kinney. Tryphena Kingsley died in 1812 at Cazenovia, Madison County, New York.

Hannah Burgess

F, b. 24 Apr 1726
Hannah Burgess|b. 24 Apr 1726|p153.htm#i95761|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
     Hannah Burgess was baptized on 24-Apr-1726 at Yarmouth, Barnstable County, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow. Hannah married Robert Ransom on 15-Apr-1743.

Robert Ransom

M
     Robert married Hannah Burgess, daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow, on 15-Apr-1743.

Phebe Burgess

F, b. 2 Apr 1728
Phebe Burgess|b. 2 Apr 1728|p153.htm#i95763|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
     Phebe Burgess was baptized on 2-Apr-1728 at Yarmouth, Barnstable County, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow.

Thankful Burgess

F, b. 16 Mar 1728/29, d. after 16 Mar 1729/30
Thankful Burgess|b. 16 Mar 1728/29\nd. after 16 Mar 1729/30|p153.htm#i95764|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
      Thankful Burgess was born on 16-Mar-1728/29 at Rochester, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow. Thankful Burgess died young after 16-Mar-1729/30 probable.

Mary Burgess

F, b. 3 Mar 1730/31
Mary Burgess|b. 3 Mar 1730/31|p153.htm#i95765|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
     Mary Burgess was baptized on 3-Mar-1730/31 at Rochester, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow.

Joseph Burgess

M, b. 8 Mar 1734/35
Joseph Burgess|b. 8 Mar 1734/35|p153.htm#i95766|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-granduncle of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-granduncle of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
      Joseph Burgess was born circa 1733 at Plainfield, Connecticut. He was baptized on 8-Mar-1734/35 at Rochester, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. He was the son of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow. Joseph married Mehitable Shepherd on 21-Mar-1756 at Plainfield, Windham County, Connecticut.

Mercy Burgess

F, b. 15 May 1737, d. before 1741
Mercy Burgess|b. 15 May 1737\nd. before 1741|p153.htm#i95767|Joseph Burgess Jr.|b. 26 Feb 1700/1\nd. 1756|p104.htm#i42032|Thankfull Snow|b. 7 Feb 1701/2\nd. after 17 Feb 1755|p104.htm#i42033|Joseph Burgess|b. circa 1668\nd. circa 1756|p104.htm#i42042|Thomasine Bangs|b. 5 May 1678|p104.htm#i42043|Lt. Nicholas Snow|b. 6 Dec 1663\nd. between 25 Jun 1751 and 29 May 1754|p104.htm#i42034|Lydia Shaw|b. say 1670\nd. after 8 Dec 1714|p104.htm#i42035|

Relationship=5th great-grandaunt of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=4th great-grandaunt of Virginia Ailene Swift.
Relationship=3rd cousin 6 times removed of David Kipp Conover.
     Mercy Burgess was baptized in 1737. She was baptized on 15-May-1737 at Rochester, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Joseph Burgess Jr. and Thankfull Snow. Mercy Burgess died before 1741.
Close