16 June 2019

The Van Frank Family, part 1 - origins

One of our family tree branches goes back and connects with the Van Frank Family.  Here's how it goes:

If we start with my grandfather, Hubert Deal Hagan, here's what our family tree would look like:


I've not really spent a lot of time researching beyond John Van Frank, so the focus of these next few blog posts will be to explore the Van Frank/Van Vranken family.  In this blog post, I'd like to explore the origins of the Van Frank family.  The next few blog posts will then go back to each of our ancestors and review the documents that I've assembled about each ancestor.

Origins of the Van Frank Name:

In millenia past, people used to only go by a first name.  As the human race became more populated, there became a need to differentiate people in the same area.  Then as there became more Johns, or more Peters, or more Williams, there needed to be another name added.  So in some early European records that I've seen, you would start to see, for example, John, son of William.   Or John Sr. and John Jr.  Then when that started not to work because there were too many Johns, they would add a surname that reflected the town they lived in or their occuaption.  So you might start to see John Black, meaning John, the Blacksmith.

The surname Vranken came from the town of "Frankenburg".  In the Dutch language, "van" means "from". So when our ancestors took the name of "Van Vranken", that meant they were "of" the town of Frankenburg".

From my research, I know that our ancestor Philip Van Frank (1769-1838) had changed his name from Van Vranken to Van Frank.    Van Frank was definitely a more "americanized" form of his last name.

Immigration of the VanVrankens

Our immigrant ancestor was Claes Gerritsen.  He was born in Frankenburg, Germany sometime between 1600 and 1625.  Because of the Thirty Years' War and Frankenburg lying in the path of the warfare, Claes left his homeland and went 200 miles down the river Rhine to Amsterdam in the Netherlands.   By 1640, he had left and immigrated to America.  (Remember that the first settlement in America was Jamestown in 1607 and the Mayflower with the Pilgrims sailed in 1620).

Claes' had two known sons, Ryckert and Gerrit.   It doesn't seem as though Claes' or his sons actually went by Van Vranken surname until the grandson Gerrit Ryckertse Van Franken.   I'll dig into this more in later blogs.

Family Movement in America

So the immigrant Claes Gerritsen was in Rensselaerwyck in 1640 in the Colony of New Netherland (which was later very eastern New York).  The next 4 or 5 generations stayed in this area, which included Albany and Schenectady.  It wasn't until the Philip Van Frank (1769-1838) generation that several of the family group decided to move west.  Many of them ended up in Elkhart County, Indiana.

Early Religion

This family were members of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church for many generations.   Family historians have been very fortunate in this regard because the Reformed Dutch church kept meticulous records, way earlier than colonial and later state records were mandated.


In the next blog post, I'll start with our earliest known Van Frank ancestor, John Van Frank.  I'll write about his life and family.  Each blog post thereafter will go back, generation by generation and we'll just see what we see!

08 June 2019

Interesting Crego Ancestors, Part 2


Interesting/famous/immigrant Crego ancestors – Part 2

I have two different online genealogical websites:

1 1)  One is my toast.net website that I have to program and upload myself.  I haven't updated it in years;
2  2)  The other is hosted by rootsweb/ancestry.  I upload my genealogy database and it is put in a format that's easy to navigate.  The advantage to using this system is that ALL my data is here - not just what I purposely wrote up and recapped. 

So that being said, as a way of presenting my information, here are several more interesting Crego ancestors:

Some more interesting Crego ancestors

8)Thomas Swartwout, Revolutionary War soldier.  Born in 1756 in New York.  Most notable about his military service is that he was with the Company of Rangers who guarded the Continental Congress starting in April 1776 for a period of 6 months.  It is possible he may have guarded the Congress while they were working on the Declaration of Independence.


9) Major Andrew Hill, Revolutionary War soldier. Born in 1732 in New York.  Major in the Dutchess County New York Militia.


10) Lemuel Backus Jennings, westward traveler, farmer.  Born in 1767 in Connecticut.  About 1788, he travelled west and was the first settler in Geneseo New York.    Eventually moved farther west into Michigan with one of his children and died there in 1851.


11)  Joseph White Jennings, son of Lemuel Backus Jennings.  Born in 1811 in Geneseo New York.  Moved west into Michigan.  Wife died young, probably in childbirth.  According to his obituary, he drank a lot.  He was shot and killed on July 4, 1869 by his son-in-law.


12) Seaton Flint, born in 1826 in Clapton, England.  Immigrated to the US in 1851 and landed in New York.  Somehow moved west into Hillsdale County, Michigan. Married Emily McLouth.  Farmer.  Died in 1908.


13)  John McLouth, born in 1758 in Massachusetts.  Served for 23 months in the American Revolution as a private.  One time he was a sergeant.  Twice he enlisted as a fifer.  Died in 1820 in New York.


Hagan ancestors that I know about, but haven't done a lot of original research:


*Swartout Family – The origins of the Swartwout Family are Dutch.  Our immigrant ancestor was Roeloff Swartwout who was born in 1634 in Amsterdam, Holland. 

*Hill Family – The origins of the Hill Family are Dutch.  Our immigrant ancestor was Anthony Hill who came to New York from Holland about 1720.