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My ancesterrs I am researching are Sutphen, Voorhees,Van Duyn,Woertman in which all had migrated to America.,NY then NJ. I started searching for, and ,researching this past year ,not kmowing anything ,about my fathers side of my family . This has opened up a whole new world for me.I am looking forward to learning much ,much more!
I also have other Dutch surnames I am still working on as well-Hendricks,v\Van Nuys,Van Pelt,DenyseNyssen,Boerum,Van Neste,Cortelyou.
Got as far as finding my 11x great grandfather in Vlaardingen Zuid Holland, The Netherlands and got stuck in 1560 as they did not have the surname yet at that time. Very hard to find Lucas Willemszoons and things like that s and find the correct ones :) But I am happt enough with the 2100 people I was able to find.
Maybe a bit unfair because I am Dutch but I am not living in the Netherlands
I am looking for the family of Jan ESSELING van Hasseling, VoC soldier (1754-1760) & tailor (1761-1790) in Cape of Good Hope. Born (we believe) in Hesselingen (today, in Meppel,Drenthe,NDL), he joined VoC in Zeeland in 1753, arrived on the Visvliet in 1754, became a freeman in 1760. Outside the Tailor citation in his burgher papers request in the Precises of the Archives, all the above information is from company records in The Hague. None giving his patronym, parents or Cape dependants.
I now believe it is his family (seeking SAF mariage & births) that head for New Brunswick Canada after Cape Town is occupied from 1795 - date which corresponds to their showing up on our shores circa 1795-1797. Later records call them Dutch, some almost forgotten family lore mentionned South Africa. Few records are kept where they settle until the late 1810s, so their ducomented origins are very scant.
The surname is not understood by the French priests early on, and many variants appeared: Eslinger, Elsliger, Esligar, Sligar, Sleigher, Sleguer...
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