| Sources |
- [S394] Ancestry.com, Public Member Trees, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;), Database online. 1causer, Owner: JCauser2707 Last viewed: Adam Dingemans, Skinner/Schinzel-Ahlemeyer/Haines Tree J_Ahlemeyer.
Record for Adam Dingemans
- [S394] Ancestry.com, Public Member Trees, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;), Database online., Skinner/Schinzel-Ahlemeyer/Haines Tree J_Ahlemeyer.
Record for Janneke Jannetgen Gerrits
- [S394] Ancestry.com, Public Member Trees, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;), Database online., Skinner/Schinzel-Ahlemeyer/Haines Tree J_Ahlemeyer.
Record for Adam Dingman
Origins of the Adam Dingman Family 1631 (Fay Family Tree, Owner: jhargrave06)-
The Dingman family found in Kinderhook and later in Albany, New York can trace their lineage to the original emigrant Adam Dingman (1631-1721) who was a prosperous freeholder in Kinderhook and later Albany. Adam is clearly identified as the patriarch of this old Dutch colonial family by the numerous records he left behind in both Ulster and Albany County. Beyond public records, the Ostrander Family Association has taken an interest in Adam and his ancestry, due to the marriage of his daughter Rachel to Peter Ostrander. The Ostrander Family Association put together an excellent short history on Adam Dingman, which provides us with a good survey of the New York records concerning the early Dingman family. Adam was a native of Antwerp; forced into fleeing his homeland sometime between 1578 and 1580 when the Spanish began their persecution of the Protestants in the Low Lands. Adam took asylum in Amsterdam where his son, also named Adam, is married in 1601. Nothing further is known of the elder Adam or of any of his other children. Though Mrs. Dingman provides good documentation for most of her family history, the actual proof of the elder Adam Dingman and his association with Antwerp is unknown. The marriage record of Adam the younger, does establish that the groom was born in Antwerp; however, his parents are not named on the document.
jhargrave06 added this on 27 Mar 2010
gwencir originally submitted this to Cirrincione Family Tree on 27 Aug 2008
- [S298] private communication: pvella, (Name: Patty Vella; Location: 1505 Methyl ST, Pittsburgh, PA 15216; Date: 14 May 2001;), Dingman Mattison, MayBell consolidated to (731) From Patty Vella, 14.May 2001, from MayBell Dingman Mattison to be read at a family reunion (1) fact ..... (28) .....
From Patty Vella, 14.May 2001, from MayBell Dingman Mattison to be read at a family reunion- year unknown (MayBell died in 1947)-
20180620 HAv 301 facts, replace other reference 135 facts= 399 ....
20190108HAv ... (406) facts
20190307HAv 355 facts, replaced ..... (541)
20190307HAv- (28) facts ..................... (569) ..... consolidated ~100 references... (731) compacted afterward, 0.24% ... (722)
20190307HAv- (1) fact, pasted from front Citation Text:
20190307HAv- (1) fact, pasted from front Citation Text:
From Patty Vella, 14.May 2001, from MayBell Dingman Mattison to be read at a family reunion- year unknown (MayBell died in 1947)-
Turn your thoughts to 1840, when our other grandfather and grandmother and family (Isaac and Amy Ellsworth Brock), came to Hebron. Can you young people visualize the trip? A yoke of oxen, and six weeks on the road from Grafton, NY to Hebron, Potter Co, PA-- a day's trip, or a little more, with your automobile. Imagine them reaching here and choosing a spot, cutting down trees, and clearing a space large enough, at first, to build a log cabin. Then the real struggle began, to keep the wolf from the door in more than one sense of the word. I've listened to my mother tell how, as a child, she had sat on the door-step and listened to the howling of the wolves close by. The future can never bring anything to us that we should be more proud of than our brave old ancestors, "heroes and heroines."
Mother dear (Mary Angeline Brock Dingman) was only six monhs old when she made that trip. But I fancy she was as happy as any of the weary travelers. Often it was hard to find a place to stop overnight. Grandma said once, they stopped at an inn, but everything was so mysterious and queer, they were afraid to stay after resting the stock. (I think they brought a cow and a calf.) Then they started on the road again. How worn and weary they must have been before they reached Potter Co! ___________________
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