Family:Adriaen Van der Donck and Mary Doughty (1)

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Facts and Events
Marriage[1] 22 Oct 1645 New Amsterdam, New York, New York, United StatesReformed Dutch Church
Children
BirthDeath

Did Mary and Adrian Van der Donck have any children?

On 10 Jun 1664, Peter Stuyvesant wrote [CDNY 14:550] a letter in which he stated "we had given out by the usual patents and which in virtue thereof had been occupied and settled by people of our nation, for instance the land of Jonas Bronck, also the land which old Van der Donck, his children and partners divided into several boweries and plantations, but which were deserted at the time of the massacre in '55," which has led many to speculate that the Van der Doncks did have children.

However, William Hoffman wrote [NYG&BR 67:339]: "In the letter written by Stuyvesant in 1664 from which we quoted a paragraph, is an allusion to van der Donck's children. Yet there is no supporting evidence that Adriaen van der Donck left any children or for that matter ever had any children. In his petition to the States General quoted above [CDNY I:476] he mentions his wife and other members of the family as ready to sail for New Netherland in May 1652 but does not mention any children. He left his patroonship Colendonck to his wife and the property, after it had been patented anew to her and her second husband in their joint names in 1666, was immediately sold by them. These facts give strong evidence that van der Donck left no descendants."

Hoffman later added [NYG&BR 67:342]: "On October 8, of that same year (1666) Mary and her husband received a patent confirming their ownership to a tract of land called Nepperhaem, that is the estate of her first husband Adriaen van der Donck. But a few days later they assigned the patent to her brother Elias Doughty who in course of time disposed of the property in several lots."

References
  1. Adriaen Vanderdock and Maria Doutheij, in Dutch Reformed Church (New York City), and Samuel S. Purple (original ed.). Marriages from 1639 to 1801 in the Reformed Dutch Church [in] New Amsterdam and New York City. (New York, New York: New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 1940)
    p. 13.

    "1645...den 22 Octob. Mr. Adriaen Vanderdock, j.m. Van Breda, en Maria Doutheij, j.d. Van Heemstede"