| Name |
Dingman, James Jacobus [1, 2, 3] |
| Birth |
1753 |
Kinderhook, Columbia, New York, USA [1] |
| Birth |
1758 |
Northampton County, Pennsylvania, USA [1, 2, 4] |
- http://springfieldsar.org/Patriots%20Buried%20Sangamon%20Co%20May%202010.pdf
17) JAMES DINGMAN
James Dingman was born in 1758. In Walker´s Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois we read
``James Dingman was born in Northampton County, Pennsylvania. He entered the service there in
1778, in Captain John Van Etten's fourth company, Col. Jacob Stroud's Regiment, sixth battalion.
A marble shaft marks his last resting-place in a family burying ground, which is near Riverton in
Sangamon County. The marker bears the following inscription: "James Dingman died September
3rd, 1836, aged 79 years, 11 months and 3 days; a Revolutionary patriot who fought the battles of
this country without reward save a consciousness of duty well done."
17
James Dingman Tombstone in Dingman Cemetery Clear Lake Township, near Riverton
The Dingman Cemetery is an old family cemetery located in Section 10, center of the section in
Clear Lake Township. It is on a hill about 100 yards east of the Grigiski Bros Slaughterhouse. It is
fenced but the stones are all fairly modern and standing. The County plat map of 1858 shows the
land to belong to Thomas A. King; the plat map of 1894 indicates the owner to be the Riverton
Coal Co. Neither map shows a cemetery.
James Dingman´s name is on the bronze marker in the Old State Capitol Plaza Springfield, Illinois.
The marker was first erected by the Springfield DAR and SAR on October 19, 1911.
The Sergeant Caleb Hopkins Chapter DAR marked this grave marked on November 3, 1968. The
marker is missing.
Sources: 1, 2, 5 Wright Photo
|
| Gender |
Male |
| Residence |
1786 |
Smithfield, Monroe, Pennsylvania, USA [1] |
| Upper Smithfield, Northampton, Pennsylvania |
| Land Transaction |
2 May 1786 |
| James Dingman and Antje, his wife May 2, 1786 conveyed 429 acres of lands (consolidated from bros Jacob & Peter) along the Delaware to James and Peter Schoonover. |
- Sussex County, Walpack Twp, New Jersey pg317 & 318
This article tells what happened to the property his father Adam gave him in his will.
Jan 12, 1751 Adam divided his land between his three sons, James, Jacob, and Peter.
Jacob and Peter subsequently deeded it to James.
James Dingman and Antje, his wife May 2, 1786 conveyed 429 acres of lands along the Delaware to James and Peter Schoonover.
This was the last conveyance of the Dingman property in Walpack.
It was about this time the family headed west first into Ohio where they are found in 1807.
James owns 700 acres of land on the east side of the Great Miami River.
His son Daniel V. Dingman starts the village of Dingmansburg recorded 23 Sept 1816 the first town in Clinton Twp. This village became East Sidney which was later incorporated into Sidney in 1919.
This was the last conveyance of the Dingman property in Walpack.
Sussex Co 1/3/2015 2:30:31 PM
?Carolr4431 originally shared this on 28 Jan 2015
Linked To James Jacobus Dingman ?
|
| Residence |
1820 |
Shelby County, Ohio, USA [1] |
| Death |
4 Sep 1835 |
Sangamon County, Illinois, USA [1] |
| Death |
3 Sep 1836 [1, 2] |
- or 1839, both dates cited in same reference.
|
| Death |
3 Sep 1839 [4] |
| or 1836, both dates cited in same reference. |
- James Dingman
Birth: 1758
Death: Sep. 3, 1839
JAMES DINGMAN,
Born in Northampton county, Pennsylvania, in 1758.
Entered the service there in 1778, in Captain John Van Etten's fourth company, Col. Jacob Stroud's Regiment, sixth battalion.
Near Riverton in Sangamon county, in a family burying ground, rises a marble shaft which marks his last resting place.
Inscription: "James Dingman died September 3rd, 1836, aged 79 years, 11 months and 3 days;
a Revolutionary patriot who fought the battles of this country without reward save a consciousness of duty well done."
Burial: Ladysmith Cemetery
Riverton, Sangamon County, Illinois, USA
Maintained by: Ancestral Sleuth
Originally Created by: Bev
Record added: Sep 04, 2004
Find A Grave Memorial# 9421502
|
| War, Revolutionary |
- 17) JAMES DINGMAN
James Dingman was born in 1758. In Walker’s Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois we read
“James Dingman was born in Northampton County, Pennsylvania. He entered the service there in
1778, in Captain John Van Etten's fourth company, Col. Jacob Stroud's Regiment, sixth battalion.
A marble shaft marks his last resting-place in a family burying ground, which is near Riverton in
Sangamon County. The marker bears the following inscription: "James Dingman died September
3rd, 1836, aged 79 years, 11 months and 3 days; a Revolutionary patriot who fought the battles of
this country without reward save a consciousness of duty well done."
17
James Dingman Tombstone in Dingman Cemetery Clear Lake Township, near Riverton
The Dingman Cemetery is an old family cemetery located in Section 10, center of the section in
Clear Lake Township. It is on a hill about 100 yards east of the Grigiski Bros Slaughterhouse. It is
fenced but the stones are all fairly modern and standing. The County plat map of 1858 shows the
land to belong to Thomas A. King; the plat map of 1894 indicates the owner to be the Riverton
Coal Co. Neither map shows a cemetery.
James Dingman’s name is on the bronze marker in the Old State Capitol Plaza Springfield, Illinois.
The marker was first erected by the Springfield DAR and SAR on October 19, 1911.
The Sergeant Caleb Hopkins Chapter DAR marked this grave marked on November 3, 1968. The
marker is missing.
Sources: 1, 2, 5 Wright Photo
|
| Name |
Jacobus Dingman |
| Name |
James Dingman [4] |
- http://springfieldsar.org/Patriots%20Buried%20Sangamon%20Co%20May%202010.pdf
17) JAMES DINGMAN
James Dingman was born in 1758. In Walker’s Revolutionary Soldiers Buried in Illinois we read
“James Dingman was born in Northampton County, Pennsylvania. He entered the service there in
1778, in Captain John Van Etten's fourth company, Col. Jacob Stroud's Regiment, sixth battalion.
A marble shaft marks his last resting-place in a family burying ground, which is near Riverton in
Sangamon County. The marker bears the following inscription: "James Dingman died September
3rd, 1836, aged 79 years, 11 months and 3 days; a Revolutionary patriot who fought the battles of
this country without reward save a consciousness of duty well done."
17
James Dingman Tombstone in Dingman Cemetery Clear Lake Township, near Riverton
The Dingman Cemetery is an old family cemetery located in Section 10, center of the section in
Clear Lake Township. It is on a hill about 100 yards east of the Grigiski Bros Slaughterhouse. It is
fenced but the stones are all fairly modern and standing. The County plat map of 1858 shows the
land to belong to Thomas A. King; the plat map of 1894 indicates the owner to be the Riverton
Coal Co. Neither map shows a cemetery.
James Dingman’s name is on the bronze marker in the Old State Capitol Plaza Springfield, Illinois.
The marker was first erected by the Springfield DAR and SAR on October 19, 1911.
The Sergeant Caleb Hopkins Chapter DAR marked this grave marked on November 3, 1968. The
marker is missing.
Sources: 1, 2, 5 Wright Photo
|
| Burial |
Ladysmith Cemetery, Riverton, Sangamon, Illinois, USA [4] |
- James Dingman
Birth: 1758
Death: Sep. 3, 1839
JAMES DINGMAN,
Born in Northampton county, Pennsylvania, in 1758.
Entered the service there in 1778, in Captain John Van Etten's fourth company, Col. Jacob Stroud's Regiment, sixth battalion.
Near Riverton in Sangamon county, in a family burying ground, rises a marble shaft which marks his last resting place.
Inscription: "James Dingman died September 3rd, 1836, aged 79 years, 11 months and 3 days;
a Revolutionary patriot who fought the battles of this country without reward save a consciousness of duty well done."
Burial: Ladysmith Cemetery
Riverton, Sangamon County, Illinois, USA
Maintained by: Ancestral Sleuth
Originally Created by: Bev
Record added: Sep 04, 2004
Find A Grave Memorial# 9421502
|
| Person ID |
I1477 |
WETZEL-SPRING |
| Family |
Decker, Antje, b. 30 Dec 1768, Ulster, Ulster, New York, USA d. 1832, Shelby County, Ohio, USA (Age 63 years) |
| Marriage |
Bef 1783 [1] |
| Children |
| | 1. Dingman, Margaret, b. 1 Apr 1794, Smithfield, Monroe, Pennsylvania, USA [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
| | 2. Dingman, Johannis, b. 19 Oct 1782, Walpack, Sussex, New Jersey, USA [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
| | 3. Dingman, Elisabeth, b. 27 Sep 1789, Smithfield, Monroe, Pennsylvania, USA [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
| | 4. Dingman, James, b. 25 Dec 1791, Smithfield, Monroe, Pennsylvania, USA d. Mar 1832, Allen, Noble, Indiana, USA (Age 40 years) [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
| | 5. Dingman, Daniel Van Campen, b. 24 Mar 1787, Walpack, Sussex, New Jersey, USA d. 3 Apr 1861, Shelby County, Ohio, USA (Age 74 years) [Father: natural] [Mother: natural] |
|
| Family ID |
F392 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |