Stonington Families to Berne, NY |
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Submitted By: Hal Miller
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By Harold H. Miller
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The land belonged to Stephen Van Rensselaer III and had been in his
family for going on to two centuries. In 1621 the Netherlands government
granted the Dutch West India Company a 24-year trading monopoly in its
American colonies. The Company conceived of the Patroon system as a
way to attract settlers without increasing its expenses. A Patroon,
or Dutch Lord, was granted a large tract of land; in return he agreed
to sponsor settlers and colonize the land at his own expense. For almost two hundred years the land above the Hudson Valley in the
Helderbergs - for the most part hilly and rocky - remained wilderness
except for a few scattered farms. Those early settlers in the Helderbergs
were refugees from the Palatinate region of what is now Germany and
had entered surreptitiously from the west. Thus they avoided detection
and having to pay rent for almost fifty years! In 1785 Stephen Van Rensselaer III inherited the Manor. He commissioned
a survey of the land above the Helderberg escarpment dividing it into
a grid of 120 and 160 square acre lots. In order to populate the unsettled
lands of the Manor, handbills were distributed throughout New England
announcing that he would give veterans of the Revolution homesteads
without cost. Only after the farms became productive would he ask for
any compensation. A group of Stonington families sent some members to look over the land
in Albany County. Between about 1787 and 1790 the following families
from Stonington and elsewhere in New London County moved to western
Albany County: Henry JONES born 1730 and wife Eunice MINER Later arrivals:
Samuel HEMPSTEAD born say 1791 and wife Marinda BENNETT After looking over the available tracts of vacant land, many of these
families settled near one another in Berne and Knox. After seven years of clearing the land and building their homes they
were required to sign a lease that typically required an annual payment
of "
nineteen bushels of good merchantable Winter Wheat, four
fat fowls,
and perform one days service with carriage and horse."
Taken from the Indenture made July 2, 1799 between Stephen Van Rensselaer
and Nathaniel Gallup and Samuel Gallup. "Cash would be accepted in lieu of wheat but very few in the township
of Berne [which at that time included Knox] had hard money. It took every
hour of daylight, working from sun up to sun down for a man to provide
shelter and food for his family. Even after he labored for years his land
and buildings were not entirely his own. Included in his deed was the
onerous quarter sale provision by which the landlord was to receive one
quarter of the selling price. Nor could death relieve the situation. The
burden of the Van Rensselaer leaseholds passed from father to son. These
conditions were perfectly legal for the deeds were drawn up by none other
than Alexander Hamilton, brother-in-law of Stephen III." (Our Heritage,
published in 1977 by the Berne Bicentennial Commission) Stephen III, known as the "Good Patroon" let the debt of his
tenants build up. But upon his death in 1839 his son Stephen IV ordered
the collection of all outstanding rents. One of the leaders of the ensuing
Anti-Rent War was John Gallup, whose ancestors were from Stonington. Following years of rioting and protests by the farmers, in 1846 a New
York State Constitutional Convention provided that no new feudal leases
could be issued, that farm land could not be leased for more than twelve
years, and quarter-sale restrictions were prohibited. But it also upheld
the legality of previous leases so that all back rent was still due and
payable. Protests continued until after 1860. Attempted evictions by the Sheriff
and his posse were met by angry mobs of armed farmers. Many families just
gave up and moved on west, including many of the families who had moved
to Albany County from Stonington. The descendants of the Stonington families that moved to the Berne and Knox area can be found in the Berne Families Genealogy posted on the Berne Historical Project site at www.Bernehistory.org.
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