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Louis Bevier Family Papers: The Elizabeth Wright
Collection (1721-1929)
Finding aid completed by Eric J. Roth, 12/20/1999 Last updated
6/29/2001
Volume: 4.17 cu. ft.
Acquisition: The papers were donated to the Huguenot Historical
Society by Elizabeth Wright in October, 1999.
Access: Unrestricted.
Copyright: Request for permission to publish materials from these
records should be discussed with the Archivist and Director of the
Huguenot Historical Society.
Family Biographical
Note
The papers chiefly document
the lives of three individuals spanning four generations of
the paternal line of the family of Louis Bevier B-30 [1]
(1717-1772). The two successors to this line primarily
represented in the papers are Louis' grandson Louis Bevier D-302
(1779-1826), and great-grandson Louis Bevier E-396 (1822-1911).
Individuals represented in the collection to a lesser degree
include David Bevier C-144 (1746-1822), Revolutionary War soldier,
Louis Bevier F-503 (1857-1925), Professor and Dean at Rutgers
University , and his daughter May Margaret Bevier G-463 (1886-1958),
wife of Ralph G. Wright, Professor of Chemistry at Rutgers University
.
Louis Bevier B-30 was
born on April 29, 1717 to Louis Bevier (1684-1753) and Elizabeth
Hasbrouck (1685-1760) and baptized at the Kingston Reformed
Dutch Church on June 9 of the same year. He married Esther DuBois
(1718-1790), daughter of Philip DuBois and Esther Gumaer on
October 10, 1745. They had five children. Louis became a member
of the Foot Company of Captain Daniel Brodhead in 1738, but
went on to become a prominent surveyor in Ulster County . At
Marbletown, Louis served as Town Clerk from 1745-1758, Assessor
(1760), Trustee (1762-1772), Justice of the Peace (1769), and
Supervisor in 1772) Louis is also listed as a member of the
building committee for the Reformed Dutch Church in 1743. [2]
He also served as deacon in 1753 and later as elder. At
the church, Louis was involved in the Coetus-Conferentie dispute,
siding with the Coetus faction, which favored centralized control
of the church from the Classis at Amsterdam , as opposed to
a more localized form church government centered in the New
World that was favored by the Conferentia party. Louis Bevier
died on September 29, 1772.
Louis' grandson Louis
Bevier D-302 was born on February 13, 1779 to David Bevier C-114
(1746-1822) [3] and Maria
Hasbrouck (1751-1816) and baptized at Marbletown ten days later
on the 23 rd . Louis was educated at the Kingston Academy ,
where he studied Greek, mathematics, surveying, and geography
in addition to other subjects. He remained at the family home
at Marbletown and married Maria Elting (1785-1859), daughter
of Cornelius Elting, on January 6, 1807. Together they had nine
children. Louis served as a captain during the War of 1812,
and was stationed at the “Quarantine Ground” on Staten Island
. In 1820, Louis was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the 130
th Regiment of Infantry in New York State . According to Hasbrouck,
Louis established a circulating library at Marbletown. [4]
He died on October 25, 1826.
Louis' youngest son,
Louis Bevier E-396 was born on August 29, 1822 and baptized
on November 3 at Marbletown. On November 17, 1847 he married
Catherine VanDyck (1824-1885), daughter of Lawrence VanDyck
and Catherine Hawes of Stuyvesant , NY . Louis and Catherine
had five children: Marie L., Margaret S., Louis, Katherine,
and Alida. As a young man, Louis Bevier received his education
at Kinderhook Academy , under the direction of Silas Metcalf.
He later took over the family farm at Marbletown and also worked
as a surveyor, and served as Town Supervisor in 1875, and from
1878-1880. Louis also became a manager of the Ulster County
Agricultural Society in 1859 and was a member of the State Charities
Aid Association. At the Marbletown Dutch Reformed Church, he
held the offices of Deacon, Elder, and Superintendent of Sunday
School. Louis' other interests included the study and collection
of geology and fossils, as well as local history and genealogy.
He died on June 17, 1911 and left no will. [5]
Collection Description
The papers chiefly relate
to the Bevier family of the towns of New Paltz and Marbletown,
Ulster County, NY, specifically, the families of Louis Bevier
B-30 (1717-1772), (1746-1822), Louis Bevier D-302 (1779-1826),
and Louis Bevier E-396 (1822-1911). Records include account
books, receipts, ciphering books, deeds, wills, mortgages, letters,
property survey books and maps, genealogical materials, photographs,
certificates, poems, memorabilia. The bulk of the collection
dates from the mid-to-late 19 th century, but there are several
important documents dating from the 18 th century as well, some
of which are in French. These include several account books,
ciphering books, and property survey books of Louis Bevier B-30,
a 1763 letter concerning a schoolmaster at Marbletown, a 1768
letter concerning a fine levied against a man named John Van
Vliet of the town of Rochester , and Resolutions of the Council
for Safety for the State of New York , 1777. [6]
The collection is organized
into six series:
Series 1: Ciphering Books
(1734-1824) 0.5 cu. ft.
Series 2: Account Books
and Receipts (1721-1901) 0.5 cu. ft.
Series 3: Estate
Papers and Property Survey Books (1737-1914) 0.17 cu.
ft.
Series 4: Genealogical
Materials (1859-1917) 1 cu. ft.
Series 5: Miscellaneous
Materials (1846-1929) 0.5 cu. ft.
Series 6: Photographs
(mid 19 th – early 20 th century) 1 cu. ft. [7]
The major strength
of the collection is the documentation of the history
of education and the life of children in Ulster County
found in the ciphering books located in Series #1. The
majority of the lessons in the ciphering books are mathematical
in nature (addition, multiplication, liquid and dry measure,
currency, fractions, decimals, simple interest, loss and
gain, the Rule of Three, etc.) although moral and religious
lessons can also be found. Much of the lesson material
appears to be designed to train the students for careers
in mercantilism or land surveying, and application problems
involving currency abound throughout the series. These
books also form part of the Huguenot Historical Society
Ciphering Book Collection, which contains 23 other ciphering
books from the 18 th and 19 th centuries. Used collectively,
these books provide an excellent source for studying the
early development of education in Ulster County from ca.
1700 to ca. 1850, before the widespread distribution of
printed textbooks and the development of government standards.
Also of interest in the
collection are the materials in Series #2 and #3 relating to
the financial and legal business of the Bevier family, specifically
the management of the Marbletown estate. Both the account books
and estate and legal papers of Louis Bevier E-396 chiefly relate
to transactions between various members of the Bevier, Hasbrouck,
Smith, Hannibal, Morris and Winchel families involving land
in the towns of Marbletown, Rochester and Rosendale , Ulster
County, NY. Several items from the late 19 th century concern
Louis Bevier's work as administrator of the estates of Edgar
Hasbrouck and Fanny Morris, both deceased. Other items of financial
or legal interest include the will of Peter Countryman (1867),
and a letter relating to the guardianship of Mary Susan Mowers
(1879), signed by Ulster County Judge and 1904 United States
Presidential Candidate Alton B. Parker.
Additionally, three account
books of Louis Bevier B-30 provide a very useful source for
studying commerce, construction, and social ties in the New
Paltz area during the early to mid-18 th century. These account
books, some of which contain entries written in French, document
transactions for a variety of items and services such as clothing,
books, foodstuffs, livestock, shoemaking, fence building, and
cutting shingles, as well as transactions involving the purchase
and sale of real estate and the settlement of debts.
Also in the collection
are daguerreotype, tin-types, albumen and paper photographic
prints, both in albums and loose, as well as framed photographs
of people and buildings relating to the Bevier, Wright, Van
Dyck, and Scott families. The majority of these photographs
date from the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries (ca. 1890-1920,
but there are some earlier images as well. Individuals chiefly
represented include Louis Bevier, May Margaret Bevier, and Elizabeth
Bevier. Other families represented include the Dealing, Halsey,
Huyck, Shaw, Hasbrouck, Ingersoll, Northrupp, Basten, DuBois,
Van Slyke, Smith, Mott, Caldwell , Conover, Johnson, Voorhis,
Dusenberry, Staats, Nervius, Jewett, Suydam, and Slarghter families.
Many photographs are unidentified. Also present are two photographs
of the Bevier House in Marbletown, ca. 1908, with one showing
the family and their black servants in the foreground; a postcard
of the Bevier-Elting House on Huguenot Street ca. 1910; and
several group shots of school classes and young people at picnic
in the woods. There is also a tintype of a black women named
Susie and a young boy, presumably her son, named Percy taken
at Kingston Point in 1905.
The remainder of the
collection consists chiefly of family memorabilia and genealogy,
including scrapbooks, certificates, sheet music, poetry, advertisements,
calendars, notebooks, various organizations' records and other
miscellaneous materials. Items of note include the bridal album
and various poems of May Margaret Bevier (1904-1911), record
books of the Marbletown School District (1818-1855) and Female
Benevolent Society (1846), marriage certificate of Louis Bevier
and Catherine Van Dyke (1847), receipts from the American Board
of Foreign Missions (1856-1857), two scrapbooks of geological
information of Louis Bevier E-396 (1871-1882), passport of Katherine
Bevier (1914), and an undated map of Eurasian Continent. Genealogy
materials include notebooks on various families, family ancestral
and pedigree charts, local history and genealogy pamphlets,
and genealogical correspondence of Louis Bevier E-396, Isaac
E. Hasbrouck, Hasbrouck Innis, May Margaret Bevier G-463, A.P.
Bovier, Dr. Nathan Webb Hunt, and others. Families documented
in the genealogical papers include Bevier, Hasbrouck, DuBois,
Elting, Newkirk, Krom, Van Keuren, Van Leuven, Van Dyke, and
many others (See Box and Folder List for more detail).
This collection significantly
overlaps two other collections of Bevier family papers: the
Captain Philip Dubois Bevier Family Papers (1685-1910) ,
and the Louis Bevier Family Papers: The Rutgers Collection
(1687-1921) the both of which are also available at the
Huguenot Historical Society Library and Archives. Another collection
entitled the Bevier Family Papers (ca. 1700-1850)
is available at the Columbia University Rare Books
and Manuscripts Library in Manhattan .
Other collections at
the Huguenot Historical Society Archives concerning the Bevier
Family include Louis Coe Bevier Civil War Letters (1862-1922),
Louis Bevier Papers (1675-1719), Harriet Bevier
Urion Family Papers (1883-1903) , the Elting Family
Papers (1703-1928), and the New Paltz Town Records,
which contains property maps surveyed by Louis Bevier
B-30, as well as information pertaining to local offices at
New Paltz held by various Bevier family members.
Also donated with this
collection was the French Bible of Louis Bevier (ca. 1647-1720)
entitled La Sainte Bible: Intrepretee par Iean Diodati,
and published in Geneva , Switzerland in 1644. This Bible
is stored with the Huguenot Historical Society Bible and
Religious Book Collection .
Series Descriptions
Series 1: Ciphering
Books (1734-1824) 0.5 cu. ft.
Handwritten mathematical
workbooks of Louis Bevier B-30, David Bevier C-114, Louis Bevier
D-302, Joseph Bevier D-304, Maria DuBois, Maria Eltinge (See
Louis Bevier D-302), and Catherine Bevier E-391. Subjects typically
include basic mathematics (addition, multiplication, etc.),
liquid and dry measure, currency, fractions, decimals, simple
interest, loss and gain, the Rule of Three, etc. The ciphering
books also contain numerous application problems relating to
the business of buying and selling goods, as well as occasional
drawings and other examples of “doodling.” The ciphering books
are arranged chronologically.
Series 2: Account
Books and Receipts (1721-1901) 0.5 cu. ft.
Ten account books (primarily
daybooks), of Louis Bevier B-30 and Louis Bevier E-396 containing
financial transactions involving farm supplies, labor, domestic
goods, and other matters of estate. Enclosed in some account
books are newspaper clippings and loose receipts. Due to the
miscellaneous nature of the account books, they have been left
unordered. Instead, each account book has been given an identification
number and title with inclusive dates. Loose receipts are arranged
chronologically.
Series 3: Estate
Papers and Property Survey Books (1737-1914) 0.17 cu.
ft.
Deeds, letters, bills
of sale, bonds, cancelled checks, mortgages, cemetery deeds,
letters of administration, survey maps, and other documents
primarily of Louis Bevier E-396 relating to property in the
towns of Marbletown, Rochester, and Rosendale, Ulster County,
NY from 1847-1887. This series also includes two 18 th century
property survey books kept by Louis Bevier B-3 and E-396, containing
copies of deeds, conveyances, survey maps, preparatory questions,
etc. Both the papers and the survey books are arranged chronologically.
Series 4: Genealogical
Materials (1859-1917) 1 cu. ft.
Notebooks, correspondence,
charts, pamphlets, clippings and other materials primarily of
Louis Bevier relating to the history and genealogy of numerous
Ulster County families such as Bevier, DuBois, Cantine, Hasbrouck,
Elting, Newkirk, VerNooy, Vreeland, and others. Materials are
arranged alphabetically by format and thereunder by date. Due
to the miscellaneous nature of the genealogical notebooks, they
have been left unordered. Instead, each notebook has been given
an identification number and title with inclusive dates.
Series 5: Miscellaneous
Materials (1846-1929) 0.5 cu. ft.
Albums, scrapbooks, certificates,
programs, maps, poems, sheet music, calendars and other miscellaneous
memorabilia of Louis Bevier E-396, Katherine Bevier F-504, and
May Margaret Bevier G-463, and other Bevier family members.
Items are identified by type and arranged alphabetically.
Series 6: Photographs
1 cu. ft.
Daguerreotype, tin-types,
albumen and paper photographic prints, both in albums and loose,
as well as framed photographs of people and buildings relating
to the Bevier, Wright, Van Dyck, and Scott families, although
other families are represented as well. Individuals chiefly
represented include Louis Bevier, May Margaret Bevier, and Elizabeth
Bevier. Many photographs are unidentified. Also present are
two photographs of the Bevier House in Marbletown, ca. 1908,
with one showing the family and black servants in the foreground,
a postcard of the Bevier-Elting House on Huguenot Street ca.
1910, and several group shots of school classes and young people
at picnic in the woods. There is also a tintype of a black women
named Susie and a young boy, presumably her son, named Percy
taken at Kingston Point in 1905. Photographs are roughly organized
by type and family.
Box and Folder
List
Box 1
Series 1: Ciphering
Books (1734-1824)
Ciphering Books:
(1734-1739)
Louis Bevier, includes accounts and legal documents
(1739) Maria
DuBois
(1743-1745)
Louis Bevier, Jun.
(1760) David
Bevier
(1767) David
Bevier
(1792-1793)
Louis Bevier
(1796) Joseph
Bevier
(1797) Joseph
Bevier
(1799) Maria
Elting
(1800) Louis
Bevier
(1824) Catherine
Bevier
(Undated,
ca. late 18 th century) Louis Bevier
Box 2
Series 2 Account
Books and Receipts (1721-1901)
Account Books:
#1, Unidentified, French
(1721-1763)
#2, Louis Bevier, Jun.
(1729-1769)
#3, Andries Bevier, kept
by Louis Bevier, one page in French (1743-1768)
#4, Louis Bevier (1856-1895)
#5, Louis Bevier (1852-1865)
#6, Unidentified, includes
clippings (1871-1901)
#7, Louis Bevier (1882)
#8, Louis Bevier (1862-1870)
#9, Louis Bevier, includes
receipts (1885-1897)
Receipts (1773, 1854-1899
and undated)
Box 3
Series 3: Estate
Papers and Property Survey Books (1737-1914)
Estate and Legal Papers:
(1763-1879)
(1881-1914
and undated)
Property Survey Books:
(1737-1745)
Louis Bevier, Jun.
(1741-1767)
Louis Bevier, Jun.
(1848-1870)
Louis Bevier
Property Survey Map (undated)
STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7
Box 4
Series 4 Genealogy
Materials (1859-1917) [8]
Genealogical Charts:
(undated)
(undated) Bevier and
Van Dyke families, STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7
Genealogical Correspondence:
(1873-1897)
(1899-1934
and undated)
Genealogical Notebooks:
#1, Westbrook,
Sahler, DePue, Kortright, VerNooy, Stillwell, Ean families (undated)
#2, Pawling,
Viele, Hoornbeck, Hoffman, and Swartwout families (undated)
#3, Decker,
Hooghteeling, and Roosa families (undated)
#4, Bevier
family (1892)
#5, “Memorandum
of Eltinges” (1892)
#6, “Memorandum
of Jan Hasbrouck Family” (1899)
#7, Newkirk,
Jansen, and Cantine families (1895-1897)
#8, “Abraham
Hasbrouck Family Record” (Undated)
#9, Bevier
family (1904)
#10, “Memorandum
of Eltinge Family” (1897-1898)
#11, “Memorandum
of LeFevre Family” (undated)
#12, Bevier,
Vreeland, Schoonmaker, and Van Keuren families (undated)
#13, “Abstract
of County Records of Sales, U.C. { Ulster County } (undated)
#14, “Memorandum
of DuBois Family” (undated)
#15, “Genealogical
Memorandum of the Bevier Family” (1892-1899)
#16, Bevier
family (1899)
#17, DuBois
family (undated)
#18, Wynkoop,
Bruyn, Crispell, DeWitt, and Freer families (undated)
#19, Marbletown
Church Records (1893-1898)
#20, Bevier
family (1914)
#21, Bevier
family (1899) STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7 .
Genealogy and Local History
Pamphlets:
(1859-1887)
(1888-1917)
Genealogical Papers,
Miscellaneous (undated)
Box 5
Series 5: Miscellaneous
Materials (1846-1929)
Bridal Album, May Margaret
Bevier (1911)
Minute Book, Marbletown
School District Annual Meetings (1818-1855)
Miscellaneous Papers
(1846-1929 and undated)
Female Benevolent Society
record book, marriage certificate, receipts from the American
Board of Foreign Missions, Rutgers College Commencement program,
poem, Reformed Church in America Coat of Arms, advertisements
for cleaning supplies, etc.
Map of Eurasian Continent
(undated) STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7.
Musical Scores, Blandina
Bevier (undated) STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7 .
Passport, Katherine Bevier
(1914) STORED WITH OVERSIZE MATERIALS IN BOX 7 .
Poems, May Margaret Bevier
(1904-1911)
Quality Street Calendars,
with photographs (1908)
Science Scrapbooks, Louis
Bevier:
(1871-1880)
(1874-1882)
Box
6
Series 6: Photographs
(mid-19 th – early 20 th century)
This box houses five
photograph albums containing chiefly albumen and tintype photographic
prints of members of the Bevier, Wright, Dealing, Van Dyck,
Halsey, Huyck, Shaw, Hasbrouck, Ingersoll, Northrupp, Basten,
DuBois, Van Slyke, Smith, Mott, Caldwell, Conover, Johnson,
Voorhis, Dusenberry, Staats, Nervius, Jewett, Suydam, and Slarghter
families. Many photographs are unidentified. There are also
two photographs of unidentified young black women.
Box
7
Series 6: Photographs
(mid-19 th – early 20 th century)
Daguerreotypes (mid-19
th century)
Mixed photographs, miscellaneous
people (mid 19 th century – early 20 th century)
Albumen and paper prints,
buildings (late 19 th – early 20 th century)
Albumen and paper prints,
Bevier family (late 19 th – early 20 th century)
Paper prints, Wright
family (early 20 th century)
Loose framed photographs,
miscellaneous people (early 20 th century)
Box 8 : OVERSIZE
MATERIALS
Account Book #10, Louis
Bevier (1851-1910) FROM SERIES #1
Genealogy Charts, Bevier
and Van Dyke Families (undated) FROM SERIES #4
Genealogical Notebook
#21, Bevier Family (1899) FROM SERIES #4
Map of Eurasian Continent
(undated) FROM SERIES #5
Musical Scores, Blandina
Bevier (undated) FROM SERIES #5
Passport, Katherine Bevier
(1914) FROM SERIES #5
Property Survey Map (undated)
FROM SERIES #3
[1]
Unless otherwise noted, identification numbers and personal
data are taken from The Bevier Family: The Descendants
of Louis Bevier, Patentee of New Paltz , New York . The
Huguenot Historical Society, New Paltz , New York (1970) compiled
by Kenneth Hasbrouck.
[2]
Sylvester, Nathaniel Bartlett. History of Ulster County
, New York , with Biographical Sketches of its
Prominent Men and
Pioneers , Part Second. Philadelphia , Evans &
Peck (1880): p. 196.
[3]
Papers of David Bevier and other close relatives can be
found in the Captain Philip Dubois Bevier Family Papers
(1685-1910) , the Louis Bevier Family Papers: The Rutgers
Collection (1687-1921) , the both of which are
also available at the Huguenot Historical Society Library and
Archives. Another collection entitled the Bevier Family
Papers (ca. 1700-1850) is available at the Columbia
University Rare Books and Manuscripts Library in Manhattan .
[4] Hasbrouck, p. 50.
[5]
Bevier, pp. 214-215.
[6]
These three items are located in Series #3: Estate Papers
and Property Survey Books.
[7]
Note: Oversized items are housed Box 7 , regardless of
series.
[8]
Note: dates in parentheses refer to the dates of item compilation,
not item contents.
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