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Simon Carel Hansense Toll

Male 1698 - 1777  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Simon Carel Hansense Toll was born on 8 May 1698 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA (son of Carel Hansen Toll and Lysbeth Janse Rinckout); died in 1777 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    An excerpt from
    "Historical Tablets and Markers of Glenville, N. Y."

    (Part Two)
    The Tenth Report of the Town Historian
    by Percy M. Van Epps

    On the north side of the Mohawk Turnpike at Hoffman's, NY, and but a short distance east of the little stream here crosses the highway, the Van Eps Creek, a memorial, prepared by the State Education Department, will soon be placed near the site of a famous home continuously occupied by the Van Eps family for two centuries. Its inscription will record:

    A NOTABLE HOME HERE, BUILT ABOUT 1720, STOOD THE FIRST HOUSE IN THIS PART OF THE VALLEY, HOME OF SEVEN GENERATIONS OF THE VAN EPS FAMILY

    Westward from Schenectady the rich flat lands of the Mohawk River, in the early days were distinguished and sold by numbers. The last of these areas on the north side of the river, in the Township of Schenectady was the seventh. This Seventh Flat embraced all the land between the Stream Tequatsera--now mapped as the Verf Kill—and the rocky bulk of Kinaquariones, the western boundary of the township. The northern boundary of this area it seems was rather hazy and indefinite merely specified as the high hills bordering the river. Whether at their base or in their summits, no one seemed to know--nor care.

    And here, on the western half of this Seventh Flat, was the Van Eps home, which the marker will commemorate. The manner of the acquisition of this home site of this Dutch family is as follows: In the closing years of the 17th century on Karel Haensen Toll, a Norwegian, and his wife, who was Lybetyea Rinckout, secured title to the entire Seventh Flat, a strip of rich alluvial soil bordering the river for two miles. Coming to this new possession, they at first lived in a dugout hollowed from the high eastern bank of the little stream spoken of above, and here we know that he and his wife, Lybetyea, lived for several years, at least. Finally, back from the brow of the bank, wherein the dugout, a large framed house was built, of rather odd and quaint design, conforming in style, perhaps, to inborn Norwegian ideals of its owner.

    Karel Haensen Toll leaving his native land met with surprising adventures on his voyage to America. His vessel was captured by a privateer and he with others was taken to Puerto Cabello, Venezuela, where he was imprisoned in the fortress. After some little time in confinement, he with a fellow prisoner managed to evade the guards and make their way to the shore. Here, having seen a strange ship anchored some little distance out, they stripped and boldly plunged in the sea, hoping they might in some way reach this vessel. After swimming for some little time, Toll's companion cried out that he could go no further and forthwith turned back toward the shore. Toll, however, boldly kept his course toward the vessel, whose lights he could see and the sea fortunately being still he was able, after swimming for hours as it seemed to him, to reach the side of the vessel. Here he was seen and taken on board and given clothing and kindly treated. When pursuit and inquiry came in the morning, he was concealed by the captain, who finally safely landed him in New Netherlands, about the year 1680.

    Karel Haensen Toll and his wife, Lybetyea, were among the first settlers of the region of Hoffman's, if indeed they were not actually the very first to make their home there. It is true that certain small parcels of land had been sold there slightly before Toll's purchase, but there is no record of any one actually living in that area prior to Toll's coming.

    Enduring the privations and hardships of pioneer life in the then wild and uncleared region, the Tolls appeared to have lived for several years in their improvised and temporary dwelling, sort of a dugout; a long shed-like structure, well let into the steep bank of the valley of the little stream, its roof said to have been of slabs supported by long poles. Its front of logs faced the west, thus catching the full afternoon sun, and doubtless it was comfortable in winter and cool in the summer time.

    And here, the fifth child was born to Karel and Lybetyea, Nailtje, or Nellie, who in 1720 became the wife of Johannes Van Eps and the mistress of the large new house built on the plateau above, the famous Van Eps home, the subject of this paper. This home, perhaps the earliest in the region, we find indicated and named--"Jo van Eps"-- on a map of the Mohawk Valley in 1757, prepared by a British Engineer during the French and Indian War. This is the only house honored by name on this map, between the Maalywyck at Scotia and the western limits of the Township of Schenectady save that of Adam Swart.

    Very soon after its construction Toll's dugout, his "cave" as he called it, became a favorite stopping place for many small parties of Mohawk Indians, always friendly to the early Dutch, passing to and from Schenectady and their nearest villages, some twenty miles up the valley. In their season, laden with packs of beaver and other peltry, destined for the shrewd traders of Schenectady and Albany, who gave in exchange, cloth, trinkets of many kinds, rum, powder and bullets--and sometimes guns, despite edicts of the law, these Indians threw down their packs before Toll's dugout, while Lybetyea regaled them with bread and cake.

    The fame of Lybetyea's cookery soon became known to the women of the Mohawk villages up the river, and in the summertime it was not long before small canoes made of the tough bark of the slippery elm, such as were used by the Mohawk women, might be seen paddled down the river and deftly steered to a landing on the gravelly shore just below Karel's dugout, to which, two or three squaws carring their papooses, and with other children running along side, made their way. Here they were always kindly received by the sagacious and diplomatic Lybetyea, who shortly treated the dusky, chattering mothers with cakes and krullers, supplemented with some little gift of cloth, and for the children, tumbling and playing before the door, a few cheap and gaudy trinkets, finger rings and small strings of many-colored Venetian beads--made expressly for the Indian trade. These Lybetyea well knew, would appeal to the mothers as well as the children.

    Meanwhile, with a twinkle in his eye, Kin-ge-go (The Fish) looked on, for this was the name, as it is recorded in the archives of the Toll family, bestowed upon Karel by his Mohawk friends after being told of his exploit battling the sea, off Puerto Cabello.

    As the little group of shrewd Dutch Families left Fort Orange, now Albany, in 1661 and trekked over the pine barrens to the Mohawk river, founding the village of Schenectady, there better to intercept the red man with his pack of peltry, so likewise Karel, our canny Norwegian, went them one better, making his home in the Woestina (the wilderness), some ten miles west of "Dorp", for so the Dutch new Schenectady. Here, mainly due to Lybetyea's bread and cakes, he was able to select and barter for the choicest skins, before his rival traders had an opportunity to see them. Occasions he never let go by, an herein is the clue to the manner of his soon amassing the fortune that by 1712 enabled him to acquire and remove to valuable and extensive farms at the Maalywyck, the name then given a fertile area just west of Scotia, even today regarded as the very best farm lands of the entire lower Mohawk Valley. Here, at the Maalwyck, Toll was soon numbered among the prominent citizens of his region, being chosen a member of the Colonial Legislature in 1716, serving thus continuously until 1726.

    It is related by Dr. Daniel J. Toll, a direct descendant of Karel, in his history of the family, a work printed in 1847, but now well-nigh unobtainable, that so great was the clamor and demand of the Indian trappers for Lybetyea's bread and cakes, that she frequently walked to Schenectady, there buying a skipple of wheat (three pecks) at the town mill, which, ground into flour she would carry on her back or shoulder all the weary ten miles to her home in the Woestina.

    In October of the year 1720, Nailtje, daughter of Karel and Lybetyea, was married to Johannes Van Eps of Schenectady, oldest son of Jan Baptist Van Eps (" The Interpreter") and his wife Helena Glen. In April of the following year, 1721, Karel and Lybetyea, by reason of "Love and Affection,"--thus state the deed--gave to the newly-wed couple title to the western half of the Seventh Flat. Therefore, from this year, 1721, we can date the foundation of the Van Eps family at Hoffmans--a place known to the Dutch simply as the Woestina till 1790, when, on the establishment there of a ferry across the Mohawk, by Harmanus Vedder, it became known as Vedders Ferry till 1835, when the name was changed to Hoffmans Ferry.

    Simon married Hesterjesse DeGraef on 13 Jun 1731 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA. Hesterjesse (daughter of Nicolaas Claase Vanpetten and Rebecca Groot) was born in 1711 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA; died in 1793 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Elisabeth Simonse Toll was born on 31 Oct 1731 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA; died in 1793 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    2. Karel Haensen Toll was born on 2 Sep 1733 in Scotia, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 8 Mar 1832 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    3. Alida Toll was born on 3 Jan 1735 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 16 Aug 1812 in Glen, Montgomery, New York, USA.
    4. Anneke Toll was born on 21 Dec 1737 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 1 Apr 1816 in Tomhannock, Rensselaer, New York, USA.
    5. Johannes Toll was born on 24 Jul 1743 in , Onondaga, New York, USA; died on 2 Sep 1804 in Scotia, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    6. Jesse Toll was born in 1746 in New York, Kings, New York, USA; died in Scotia, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    7. Eefje Eva Toll was born on 15 Jan 1749 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 11 May 1835 in Tomhannock, Rensselaer, New York, USA; was buried in Tomhannock, Rensselaer, New York, USA.
    8. Daniel Toll was born on 27 Oct 1751 in , Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 8 Mar 1832 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA; was buried in Scotia, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    9. Sarah Toll was born on 25 Jul 1756 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA; died on 3 Sep 1818 in Saratoga Springs, Saratoga, New York, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Carel Hansen Toll was born in 1658 in Langesund, Bamble, Telemark, Norway (son of Hans Carelse Toll and Neeltje Cornelius Van Voorhout Egemont Toll); died in Mar 1738 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1720, Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA

    Carel married Lysbeth Janse Rinckout in 1684 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA. Lysbeth was born in 1660 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA; died on 19 Oct 1734 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Lysbeth Janse Rinckout was born in 1660 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA; died on 19 Oct 1734 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    Children:
    1. Eva Toll was born in 1684 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA; died in Jul 1729 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    2. Daniel Toll was born on 11 Jul 1691 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 18 Jul 1748 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    3. Neeltje Carel Toll was born on 7 Jul 1695 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA; died on 20 Jun 1786 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA.
    4. 1. Simon Carel Hansense Toll was born on 8 May 1698 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA; died in 1777 in Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Hans Carelse Toll was born in 1635 in Langesund, Bamble, Telemark, Norway; died on 20 May 1685 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Arrival: 1658, New York, Kings, New York, USA

    Hans married Neeltje Cornelius Van Voorhout Egemont Toll on 1 Apr 1651 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA. Neeltje (daughter of Cornelis Segerse and Brechtje Jacobs) was born on 15 Oct 1635 in Leiden, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands; died on 1 Apr 1671 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Neeltje Cornelius Van Voorhout Egemont Toll was born on 15 Oct 1635 in Leiden, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands (daughter of Cornelis Segerse and Brechtje Jacobs); died on 1 Apr 1671 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.
    Children:
    1. Rachel Hanse was born in 1655.
    2. 2. Carel Hansen Toll was born in 1658 in Langesund, Bamble, Telemark, Norway; died in Mar 1738 in Maalwyck, Glenville, Schenectady, New York, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Cornelis Segerse was born in 1598 in Voorhout, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands; died in 1688 in Albany, Albany, New York, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1644, Rensselaerwick, Albany, New York, USA
    • Arrival: Mar 1644, Rensselaerwick, Albany, New York, USA

    Cornelis married Brechtje Jacobs in 1619 in Voorhout, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. Brechtje was born in 1598 in Voorhout, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands; died in Apr 1667 in , Albany, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Brechtje Jacobs was born in 1598 in Voorhout, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands; died in Apr 1667 in , Albany, New York, USA.
    Children:
    1. Cornelis Segerse was born in 1622.
    2. Claes Segerse was born in 1624.
    3. Lysbeth Segerse was born in 1628 in Voorhout, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands.
    4. Seger Segerse was born in 1630.
    5. Jannetje Segerse was born in 1634.
    6. 5. Neeltje Cornelius Van Voorhout Egemont Toll was born on 15 Oct 1635 in Leiden, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands; died on 1 Apr 1671 in Schenectady, Schenectady, New York, USA.