Captain Daniel Patrick1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

M, b. circa 1605, d. 2 June 1644
     Daniel was born circa 1605 in Ireland. He was serving in the Prince of Orange Guards in the Netherlands at the time of his marriage.10 Daniel married Anneken van Beyeren, daughter of Albert Sebastiaens van Beyeren and Maritgen Pauwels Sterlinex, on 3 March 1630 in The Hague, Holland, Netherlands.11 On 23 March 1630 [the Tuesday after Easter], he, son-in-law & guardian of Anna von Beyeren [his wife], appeared in the Orphan's Chamber with Maritgen Pauwels Stewicx, widow of the late Albert Sebastiaens von Beyeren, and others. They were there to provide proof of his wife & her siblings' paternal inheritance.12 On 20 April 1630, Daniel & his wife, Anna, left from Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, county Norfolk, England, along with Captain John Underhil, aboard the ship, one of the ten vessels of the Winthrop fleet, bound for New England. They arrived at the Boston Harbor in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. John & Daniel had been hired by Govenor John Winthrop to train the militia.. He and John Underhill were declared freemen of the Bay Colony at Watertown 18 May 1631. As part of his compensation as military trainer, Daniel was granted land in Newtown, where he initially settled. Soon though, he began to make plans to move to Watertown, and on 20 October 1635, he sold his last property in Newtown. Less than a month later, 14 November 1635 he was considered a resident of Watertown. On 9 March 1637, the town granted him the title of Captain as he was in charge of the military protection of the town.13 Daniel and his friend, Robert Feake, purchased land at Norwalk, on 20 April 1640, the first purchase from the Indians in that locale. Daniel did not settle there however, as 3 months later on 18 July 1640, he and Robert Feake purchased land at what was to be Greenwich. They were of the first settlers there and were founders of that town. Elizabeth, Robert's wife, made a purchase there as well of adjoining lands. Shortly after the settling at Greenwich trouble again was stirred up with the Indians, which led to the town asking for military support from the Colony and eventually to the confrontation with the Dutch soldier.14 He was killed because he had become engaged in an arguement with Hans Frederick, a Dutch soldier. He spit upon his face & turned to leave and the Dutchman shot him in the back of the head. He was in Stamford at Captain Underhills home, having fled from the Indians.15

Family

Anna van Beyeren b. 1610, d. Apr 1656
Children

Citations

  1. [S152] Assistant Professor of History in Wells College Isabel MacBeath Calder, The New Haven Colony
    , Page 62 - On July 18, 1640, a few weeks subsequent to the Turner purchase, Robert Feake and Daniel Patrick of Watertown in Massachusetts Bay bought the land to the west of Toquams, between Asamuck and Tatomuck rivers. At the same time, feake’s wife Elizabeth Fones, widow of Henry Winthrop, acquired title to the neighboring neck of land subsequently known as Elizabeth’s neck. In this territory Feake and Patrick founded the small settlement of Greenwich.

    Page 76 - …On November 2, 1640, Ward and Coe and Richard Gildersleeve came to an agreement with Robert Feake and Daniel Patrick regarding the boundry between the Turner purchase and Greenwich. On November 4, 1640, at New Haven, the two deputies agreed to settle a plantation under the jurisdiction of New Haven.
  2. [S90] Genealogies of Long Island Families From the New York Genealogical & Biographical Record, Volume II: pages 497-499. "The Ancestry of Anna van Beyeren who married first Daniel Patrick & second Tobias Feake" by Josephine Frost, pages 420-421. "The Feake Family of Norfolk, London, & Colonial America" by George E. McCracken.
  3. [S151] Charles Jeremy Hoadly, Records of the Colony and Plantation of New Haven, 1638 to 1649, Transscribed and Edited in accordance with a Resolution of the General Assembly of Connecticut with occasioal notes and an appendix.
    Volume I
    , page 127.
  4. [S115] Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations Of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, On The Basis Of Farmer's Registar, Volume III: page 369.
  5. [S95] Spencer P. Mead, History of Greenwich, Connecticut, pages 5-8, 14, 16, 17, 24, 26, 30 [son coming from Flushing to obtain father's land], 288-89, 476,577.
  6. [S967] Ambrose Milton Shotwell, Annals of Our Colonial Ancestors & Their Descendants


    R.
  7. [S115] Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations Of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, On The Basis Of Farmer's Registar, Volume III: page 369 - Daniel Patrick -A Watertown, one of the two captains in regular pay, brought in the fleet by Winthrop 1630, freem. 18 May 1631, was short time of Cambridge, but at W. selectman 1638; removed to Connecticut, had a Dutch wife and was killed by a Dutchman 1643, at Stamford.
  8. [S971] Patricia L. Haslam, Captain Daniel Patrick of the 1630 Winthrop Fleet & Some of His Descendants, pages 466-484.
  9. [S457] Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Daniel Patrick.
  10. [S506] Note: The Prince of Orange is the heir apparent to the throne of the Netherlands.
  11. [S90] Genealogies of Long Island Families From the New York Genealogical & Biographical Record, Volume II: pages 497-499 - "The Ancestry of Anna van Beyeren who married first Daniel Patrick & second Tobias Feake" by Josephine Frost. - In the town Archives at th Hague there was found the following marriage record: "3 March 1630 Daniel Kir[k]patrick from England, Captain, with Anna van Beyeran, spinster, living in the Hague."
  12. [S971] Patricia L. Haslam, Captain Daniel Patrick of the 1630 Winthrop Fleet & Some of His Descendants, pages 467 - proof for paternal inheritance of Anna von Beyeren - the four named children included Anneken, then aged 20 years, who was given 200 guilders in advancement of her marriage & also 200 guilders for an obligation, plus a share of real estate ...
  13. [S971] Patricia L. Haslam, Captain Daniel Patrick of the 1630 Winthrop Fleet & Some of His Descendants, page 468 - Places he resided.
  14. [S971] Patricia L. Haslam, Captain Daniel Patrick of the 1630 Winthrop Fleet & Some of His Descendants, page 470 -Haslam - page 470 - Winthrop's dislike for Daniel Patrick is apparent in an entry dated 11.2.1643, when he wrote:
    He was entertained of us out of Holland, where he was a common soldier of the Prince's guard, to exercise our men. We made him a Captain and maintained him. Afterwards he was admitted to the church at Watertown and made a freeman. But he grew very proud and vicious, for although he had a wife of his own, a good Dutch woman, yet he despised her and followed after other women.

  15. [S90] Genealogies of Long Island Families From the New York Genealogical & Biographical Record, Volume I: page -.