Person:Willempje Seubering (1)

Willempje Roelofse Seubering
m. 1620
  1. Willempje Roelofse Seubering1619 - 1684
  2. Lambertje SebringAbt 1623 - 1675
  3. Jan Roelofse SeuberingAbt 1631 - 1703
  4. Jacob Roelofse Sebring1634 - Aft 1685
  5. Daniel Roelofse Sebring1636 - Aft 1699
m. 10 Oct 1649
  1. Lucas Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1650 - Aft 1724
  2. Jan Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1652 - Bet 1723 & 1735
  3. Albert Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1654 - Aft 1727
  4. Aeltje Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1656 -
  5. Jannetje Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1658 - Bef 1709
  6. Hendrickje Stevense van VoorheesAbt 1660 - Abt 1693
  7. Abraham Stevense van Voorhees1664 -
Facts and Events
Name Willempje Roelofse Seubering
Married Name _____ van Voorhees
Gender Female
Christening? 1619 Beilen, Drenthe, Netherlands
Marriage 10 Oct 1649 Hees, Drenthe, Netherlandsto Steven Coertse van Voorhees
Death? 1684 Flatbush, Kings, New York, United States
Burial? 16 Feb 1684 Flatbush, Kings, New York, United States
Ancestral File Number 8VWM-VX
Questionable information identified by WeRelate automation
To check:Born before parents' marriage
References
  1.   Christoph, Florence A. Van Voorhees Family in America: The First Six Generations. (Baltimore, MD: Van Voorhees Association, 2000)
    p. 1.

    Steven Coerte Van Voorhees, born 1599 or 1600, at Hees, Drenthe, Netherlands; married first Aeltjen Wessels circa 1625; married second Willempie Roelofse Seubering from Zwiggelte, Drenthe, daughter of Roelof Seubering, circa 1649; died Feb. 16, 1684 at Flatlands, Kings Co., NY. [D.J. Wijmer ("Steven Coerts, His Family and His Dutch Background," in Through a Dutch Door, 20-23) thinks he is probably a son of Coert Alberts te Voorhees (d. ca. 1620), grandson of Albert Coerts (d. 1581), and great-grandson of Coert to Heess (d. 1544) and his wife Gese (d. 1537). See also Elias W. Van Voorhis, A Genealogy of the Van Voorhees Family in America, pg. 10; and Albert L. Stokes, The Van Voorhees Family, pg. 45. A biography of Steven Coert by Daniel Voorhis Grinnell can be found in "de Halve Maen," April-July 1966.]