Daniel Denton1,2

M, b. circa 1628, d. circa 1703
FatherRev. Richard Denton1
Relationships
9th great-grandfather of Evelyn Marie Van Dyke
9th great-grandfather of Robert Edward Van Dyke
9th great-grandfather of John William Van Dyke
9th great-grandfather of Walter Carl Van Dyke
     Daniel Denton, son of Rev. Richard Denton, was born circa 1628 at Yorkshire, England.3,4

     Daniel Denton lived circa 1650 at New York
He settled on Long Island, and was Town Clerk of Hempstead in 1650. Upon the organization of the town of Jamaica, he became its first clerk in 1656, and was re-elected in 1657 and 1661. The next year he was appointed one of its magistrates. He was one of the company that secured a deed, October 28, 1664, for the land at and about Elizabeth town, New Jersey, known as the ' Elizabethtown Grant,' or patent. He was appointed a Justice of the Peace by Governor Nichols, March 16, 1665, and again in 1666.3


     Daniel married Abigail Stevenson circa 1660.5,2

     Daniel was
As the Flemish breed of horses introduced by the Dutch had greatly deteriorated, large herds of undersized animals running wild on Long Island and the upper part of Manhattan, it was fostered to have annual race-meetings at Hempstead. They were not designed so much 'for the divertisement of the youth alone' as for the encouragement of the bettering the breed of horses' which had suffered such neglect. At the time of these races in the month of May, it was ordered, the annual muster of all the militia of Long Island should be held at Hempstead. Here, toward the middle of the island, says the first separate account of the province in the English tongue, written by Daniel Denton and published at London in 1670, . . .' lieth a plain sixteen miles long and four broad upon which plain grows fine grass that makes exceeding good hay and is very good pasture for sheep and other cattle; where you shall find neither stick nor stone to hinder the horse-heels or endanger them in their races, and once a year the best horses in the island are brought hither to try their swiftness, and the swiftest rewarded with a silver cup, two being annually procured for that purpose.' The little book, published at London in 1670, in which Daniel Denton spoke of the horse-races on Long Island was the first English publication relating wholly to the Dutch province. It is fully described on its own title-page: 'A Brief Description of NEW YORK: Formerly Called New Netherlands. With the Places thereunto Adjoining. Together with the Manner of its Situation, Fertility of the Soyle, Healthfulness of the Climate, and the Commodities thence produced. Also Some Directions and Advice to such as shall go thither: An Account of what Commodities they shall take with them; The Profit and Pleasure that may accrue to them thereby. Likewise A Brief RELATION of the Customs of the Indians there.' Daniel Denton, a son of Richard Denton a Presbyterian minister who had been one of the original patentees of Hempstead, was during the Dutch period town clerk of Hempstead and of Jamaica. In 1665 he was one of the deputies from Jamaica to the Hempstead meeting and one of the first justices appointed by Governor Nicolls. His book tells that it was published to attract settlers to a province which until recently had been 'new or unknown to the English.' Certainly this was true, for the edition of 1667 of Heylin's Cosmography ignores the fact that the province then belonged to England and says that it contained few people and 'only one village.' Denton's over-enthusiastic tone and the fact that, he does not speak in detail of any part of the province except Long Island suggest that he was writing as a land agent on his own or his friends' behalf, yet his specific statements seem truthful. Of the city he says: New York is built most of brick and stone and covered with red and black tile, and the land being high it gives at a distance a pleasing aspect to the spectators. The inhabitants consist most of English and Dutch and have considerable trade with the Indians for beaver, otter, raccoon skins, with other furs; and also for bear, deer, and elk skins; and are supplied with venison and fowl in the winter and fish in the summer by the Indians, which they buy at an easy rate.... On Long Island corn and cattle were the chief sources of livelihood. 'Store of flax' was grown, for 'every one' made 'their own linen' as well as woollen cloth and linsey-woolsey 'for their own wearing.' Had there been more artisans in the province it would soon have been able 'to live without the help of any other country' in the matter of clothing. All artisans lived 'happily' and persons who had no trade betook themselves to husbandry, got lands of their own, and lived 'exceeding well.' Along the southern shore of Long Island 'an innumerable multitude of seals,' which made 'an excellent oil,' lay all winter upon the 'broken marshes and beaches or bars of sand,' but the people had not yet learned how to hunt them although in small boats they captured the whales and 'crampasses' that numerously frequented the same coast. Wild fruits of many kinds were abundant - strawberries so plentiful that in June when the 'fields and woods' were I dyed red' with them the country people, says Denton, ... instantly arm themselves with bottles of wine, cream, and sugar and instead of a coat of mail every one takes a female upon his horse behind him, and so rushing violently into the fields, never leave until they have disrobed them of their red colors and turned them into the old habit. Only one more passage need be quoted from Denton's laudations. He has not the land agent's accent when he says, in words that are pleasant to remember as an epitaph upon the forefathers of New York: Were it not to avoid prolixity I could say a great deal more, and yet say too little, how free are those parts of the world from that pride and oppression with their miserable effects, which many, nay, almost all parts of the world are troubled with, being ignorant of the pomp and bravery which aspiring humours are servants to, and striving after almost everywhere: where a wagon or cart gives as good content as a coach, and a piece of their home made cloth better than the finest lawns or richest silks; and though their low-roofed houses may seem to shut their doors against pride and luxury, yet how do they stand wide open to let charity in and out, whether to assist each other or relieve a stranger... After Denton's book no other was published relating specifically to Long Island until Wood's Sketch of the First Settlement of Long Island and Furman's Antiquities of Long Island appeared in 1824.
in 1670 at New York.6

     Daniel Denton and Abigail Stevenson were divorced in 1672.7

     Daniel Denton lived
(He) settled in Piscataway, in East Jersey, where he was appointed a Magistrate August 25, 1673. The next year he sold out his landed interest at Piscataway and removed to Springfield, Massachusetts. Here he taught school and was for a time Town Recorder. At a town meeting held in Jamaica, Long Island, on June 12, 1684, it was ordered that 'Daniel Denton shall have liberty to come and settle himself and family in Jamaica. ' ' Here he was once more selected Town Clerk. On December 20, 1689, he was commissioned as County Clerk of Queen's County, Long Island.7


     Daniel married Hannah Leonard on 24 April 1676.7,2

     Daniel died circa 1703.7

Child of Daniel Denton and Abigail Stevenson

Child of Daniel Denton

Family: Daniel Denton and Hannah Leonard

Last Edited=23 Jul 2018

Citations

  1. [S99] Compiler: Mary Jane Denton, Denton Family Tree In America, The 1635 ~ 2005, This information was provided by Mary Jane Denton. e-mail e-mail address.
  2. [S23] Unknown author, Ancestry Web Site, Url: http://www.ancestry.com, U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700 for Daniel Denton; Page 216; Genealogical Publishing Co.; Baltimore, MD, USA; Volume Title: New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
  3. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 133.
  4. [S23] Unknown author, Ancestry Web Site, Url: http://www.ancestry.com, U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700 for Daniel Denton; Page 122; Genealogical Publishing Co.; Baltimore, MD, USA; Volume Title: New England Marriages Prior to 1700.
  5. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 132 and 134.
  6. [S106] Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer, History of the City of New York in the Seventeenth Century: New Amsterdam, Volume: II, Found on Pages 137 thru 139.
  7. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 134.
  8. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 134 and 136.

Daniel Denton1

M
FatherIsaac Denton1
MotherJane Okie1 d. 26 Nov 1838
Relationships
3rd great-granduncle of Evelyn Marie Van Dyke
3rd great-granduncle of Robert Edward Van Dyke
3rd great-granduncle of John William Van Dyke
3rd great-granduncle of Walter Carl Van Dyke
Last Edited=19 Jun 2018

Citations

  1. [S99] Compiler: Mary Jane Denton, Denton Family Tree In America, The 1635 ~ 2005, This information was provided by Mary Jane Denton. e-mail e-mail address.

Daniel Denton II1

M, b. circa 1661, d. circa 1690
FatherDaniel Denton1 b. c 1628, d. c 1703
Relationships
8th great-grandfather of Evelyn Marie Van Dyke
8th great-grandfather of Robert Edward Van Dyke
8th great-grandfather of John William Van Dyke
8th great-grandfather of Walter Carl Van Dyke
     Daniel Denton II, son of Daniel Denton, was born circa 1661.1,2
     Daniel was baptized on 14 December 1679 at Dutch Reformed Church, Brooklyn.2

     Daniel, married Deborah Seaman, daughter of John Seaman and Martha Moore, in 1681. He accompanied his father to Springfield, Massachusetts, where he was 'presented to the grand jury in 1681, for running away to Rhode Island, and marrying without the consent of his parents.1,3'

     Daniel died circa 1690.4

Family: Daniel Denton II and Deborah Seaman

Child of Daniel Denton II

Last Edited=22 Jun 2018

Citations

  1. [S99] Compiler: Mary Jane Denton, Denton Family Tree In America, The 1635 ~ 2005, This information was provided by Mary Jane Denton. e-mail e-mail address.
  2. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 134.
  3. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 134 and 135.
  4. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 135.

Daniel Denton III1

M, b. 1685, d. circa 1753
FatherDaniel Denton II1 b. c 1661, d. c 1690
Relationships
7th great-grandfather of Evelyn Marie Van Dyke
7th great-grandfather of Robert Edward Van Dyke
7th great-grandfather of John William Van Dyke
7th great-grandfather of Walter Carl Van Dyke
     Daniel Denton III, son of Daniel Denton II, was born in 1685.1

     Daniel married Hannah Seaman, daughter of Benjamin Seaman and Martha Titus, circa 1713.1

     Daniel died circa 1753; On July 14th of that year his widow married Thomas Temple of Hempstead.1,2

Children of Daniel Denton III and Hannah Seaman

Child of Daniel Denton III

Last Edited=19 Jun 2018

Citations

  1. [S99] Compiler: Mary Jane Denton, Denton Family Tree In America, The 1635 ~ 2005, This information was provided by Mary Jane Denton. e-mail e-mail address.
  2. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 135.

Daniel Denton IV1

M, b. circa 1754, d. circa 1825
FatherJoseph Denton1 b. 6 Mar 1722, d. c 1804
Relationships
5th great-grandfather of Evelyn Marie Van Dyke
5th great-grandfather of Robert Edward Van Dyke
5th great-grandfather of John William Van Dyke
5th great-grandfather of Walter Carl Van Dyke
     Daniel married Hannah Seaman.1
     Daniel Denton IV, son of Joseph Denton, was born circa 1754.1

     Daniel died circa 1825.1,2

Children of Daniel Denton IV and Hannah Seaman

Last Edited=19 Jun 2018

Citations

  1. [S99] Compiler: Mary Jane Denton, Denton Family Tree In America, The 1635 ~ 2005, This information was provided by Mary Jane Denton. e-mail e-mail address.
  2. [S105] A.M..M.D. JOHN R. STEVENSON, Thomas Stevenson of London, England and His Descendants, Information on page 135.
 
Compiler: John W. Van Dyke: John W. Van Dyke