Notes |
- RESEARCH_NOTES:
1. Censuses:
1790 US: http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyherkim/census/mohawk1790.html; 1790 Census, Montgomery County, MohawkTown:
1st No.-Free white males over 16 years 2nd No.-Free white males under 16 years 3rd No.-Free white females 4th No.-All other free persons 5th No.-Slaves
*illegible
Brittain, Abraham - 1-2-5-0-0 [Abraham Brinton?]Frederick, Francis - 1-3-3-0-0Frederick, Peter - 1-3-5-0-0Frederick, Philip - 1-0-1-0-2
Marlet, Michael - 1-1-4-0-0Mower, Hendrick - 1-1-1-0-0
VanHorn, Cornelius - 2-2-5-0-0VanHorn, Thomas - 1-1-5-0-*
2. The following is from http://www.threerivershms.com/knittlesubsistence.htm with the following explanation: "'Early Eighteenth Century Palatine Emigration - A British Government Redemptioner Project to Manufacture Naval Stores,' by Walter Allen Knittle, Ph.D., Department of History, College of the City of New York, Published Philadelphia, 1937: The NEW YORK SUBSISTENCE LIST. This list was compiled from the "journal" of Palatine debtors to the British government for subsistence given either in New York City or in the Hudson River settlements, from their landing in 1710 to September, 1712. The list was found in the Public Record Office, C. O. 5/1230 and was corrected from the accompanying "ledger," C. O. 5/1231. As it seemed advisable to include some indication of the number in each family and since limitations of space forbade the inclusion of the six notations at various times given in the journal, only two notations have been given here, that is, the first in 1710 usually and the last in 1712 normally. Thus, with "Abelman, Johann Peter 2-1, 2-0," the size of the family signified is two adults and one child under ten years of age; by 1712 the child had died for we have noted only two adults. All children over ten years of age were given the full allowance for adults and were therefore not distinguished from more mature members of the family. Where only one notation of family size appears, the presumption is of death, or in the case of women, of marriage." The following are the only Frederick listings and I am not sure of the relation if any:
Friderich, Conrad 4-0, 4-0
Friderich, Hanns Adam 1-0, 2-0
[Nothing similar to Saltz nor C(K)assadt.]
3. "Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of Caughnawaga: now the Reformed Church of Fonda, in the village of Fonda, Montgomery County, N.Y.," New York, 1917, 748 pp.: Franciscus, offspring of Pieter Grosch and Anna Eva Saltz, baptized 13 May 1764 with sponsors Franciscus Saltz and Sophia Frederick. [Sophia would be Anna's sister; Franciscus could be Sophia's and Anna's father or maybe a brother?]
4. Henry Z. Jones, "Even More Palatine Families, 18th Century Immigrants to the American Colonies and their German, Swiss and Austrian Origins," 2002, p. 217:
"Peter Gross.
Peter Kross was on a tax list of Mohawk in 1766 ("Upstate New York in the 1760s," by Florence Christoph, p. 127). Pieter Grosch and wife Anna Eva Saltz had among their ch.:
1) Franciscus, bpt. 13 May 1764 - sp: Franciscus Saltz and Sophia Frederich (Caughnawaga Reformed Chbk.)
MARRIAGE:
1. Ordinance index reports name extraction work with marriage at the "High and Low Dutch Reformed Congregation, Schoharie, Schoharie County, New York" per batch M511341, dates 1732-1799, source 534210, film, printout 1205775. Names show up as Philip Frederic and Maria Sophia Salzer. Sealing to spouse done 24 Feb 1979 IFALL. I looked up this record in a transcribed copy of the records at the Montgomery Co., NY Archives: "11 Nov 1752 were registered for marriage, Philip Frederic, legitimate son of Peter Frederich and Maria Sophia Salzer, legitimate daughter of Frans Saltzer, both living iin Mohawk's Land."
2. There is a Phillip Frederick in the 1800 census in Florida, Montgomery County, New York. The record of his marriage at the Trinity Church lists he and his wife as being from Mohawkland from Glen Mc Dowell glenmcd@msn.com
DEATH:
1. Source from will probate of husband Phillip Frederick, a transcribed copy of which is on file with me and is entitled "Wills 0506564, Montgomery County, New York." Also summarized in the book "Compendium of Early Mohawk Valley Families" by Maryly B. Penrose, vol. 1, p. 282, and noted as "WMC 56:153-54." It appears that he had married a second time to a Sarah who had a son, Samuel Roadwell, from a previous marriage. All other children are listed as his whereas Samuel is listed as his wife's son. This would indicated two marriages with Sarah being the last. Since the Will is dated 7 May 1804 and probated 6 Nov 1804, Maria would have to had been deceased by 1804 presumably in Florida, Montgomery, NY.
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