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Samuel ten Broeck, geboren in 1680, Kinderhook, gestorven op 5 april 1756 (leeftijd bij overlijden: 76 jaar oud) [Aantekening 1]
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gehuwd op 7 november 1712, Albany NY, met ...
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Maria van Rensselaer, geboren op 23 maart 1689, Albany, gedoopt op 27 maart 1689, Reformed Dutch Church, New York, gestorven op 31 juli 1771 (leeftijd bij overlijden: 82 jaar oud)
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dochter van Hendrick van Rensselaer 1667-1744 en
Catharina Annetje van Bruggen 1665-1730
, hieruit :
Totaal : 33 personen, (echtgenoten weggelaten = 17)
Samuel, through the bequest of his father, inherited his portion of the estate in lands that were part of the bouwerie on the Roelf Jansen Kil, in the section where the Ten Broeck family is one of the most ancient. It was here that he passed the years of his life, and by his will made April 23, 1750, he devised the larger part of the tract to his eldest son.
This property had formerly been divided between Albany and Dutchess Counties, but by the Act of May 24, 1717, relating to certain grants on the south of the Roelof Jansen Kil, it was all annexed to Albany County. Thus it remained until, in 1786, the lines were once more changed, and it became part of the new county of Columbia.
In a list of freeholders, made in 1720, "pursuant of an order of Court", Samuel Ten Broeck is cited as "of Claverack". He was also justice of the peace for Albany County.
He and his younger brother, Johannes, married sisters, Samuel and Maria being married in the "two steeple" church of Albany. They were of notable lineage in both branches, reaching back to the Patroons of Rensselaerwyck, and to Anneke Jans, so famous in New York litigation suits; and through the latter, descended from the ninth Prince of the House of Orange: William of Nassau, Sovereign Count of the States of Holland and Zeeland.
Jeremiah's will was made at Hudson, New York, on February 4, 1801. It was proved in 1806, one of the witnesses being Abraham Ten Broeck, Justice of the Peace in Columbia County.