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Jan (John) Pietersz van Deventer (1627-ca. 1692) married Maria Hoogeboom in 1652, and 1661 the family immigrated from The Netherlands to New Amsterdam, New York and settled in Brooklyn, New York. Descendants and relatives lived in New York, New Jersey, Virginia, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Arkansas, Kansas, Illinois, Oklahoma, California, Texas, Missouri, Colorado, Wisconsin and elsewhere. Includes some ancestry and genealogical data in The Netherlands.
Jan/John Pietersz van Deventer (1627-ca. 1692) married Marie/Marieken Hoogeboom at Houten, Netherlands, in 1652. In 1662, they immigrated to New Netherlands and settled on Long Island. Willis Van Devanter (1859-1941) became Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States under President Taft. Descendants scattered throughout the country.
The bibliographic holdings of family histories at the Library of Congress. Entries are arranged alphabetically of the works of those involved in Genealogy and also items available through the Library of Congress.
Ancestors listed lived chiefly in New Jersey and New York.
William Ball came to Saline County, Missouri in 1837. She married Sarah Eleanor Lee in 1838. They later returned to Loudoun County, Virginia.
Pieter Narne Van Doren (ca.1615-1658/1659) immigrated from The Netherlands to New Amsterdam, New York, and married widow Catharyn Stelting in 1657. Descendants lived in New York, New Jersey, West Virginia, Illinois and elsewhere.
In this vivid and compelling memoir, Dr. Geoffrey Dean tells the story of his lifetime of travel, medical practice, and groundbreaking research. Born in Wales in 1918, Dean spent his early years in the north of England. After training to be a doctor in Liverpool, he served during the Second World War as a medical officer in Bomber Command. Following the war, as he recounts here, Dean relocated himself and his family to South Africa, where he established a busy medical practice that he continued for more than twenty years. During this period, he kept at the forefront of medical research, devoting the bulk of his attention to the epidemiology of porphyria, a disease that causes paralysis. All the while, his work kept him traveling, with stops in China, Sweden, Holland, Cyprus, and Spain—including a period as the personal physician to the millionaire governor of the Fiji Islands. Threaded through with surprising adventures and rich anecdotes of the author's travels in the course of his research, The Turnstone is a lively account of the life of a man whose commitment to medicine brought him to the ends of the earth—and kept him there for more than sixty years.
Holland on the Hudson traces the history of New Netherland from Henry Hudson's exploration of the region in 1609 to the surrender of the Dutch colony to an English fleet in 1664. Oliver A. Rink's approach is both narrative an analytic as he describes in detail the colony's commercial origins, its social and economic development, and the colonists' rivalry with the English in the New World.