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Roelof J. and Ezekiel Elting Family Papers
(1703-1928)
Finding Aid Completed by Eric Roth 1/20/1999
Last revised 7/5/2005
Volume: 1.8 cu. ft.
Acquisition: The papers were donated to the Huguenot Historical
Society by Jacob Elting. Date is unknown.
Access: Access is unrestricted. Copyright: Request for permission to publish materials from these
records should be discussed with the Archivist and Director of the
Huguenot Historical Society.
Biographical Sketches
The papers primarily
document the lives of three individuals spanning three generations
of the Elting family in New Paltz, New York: Roelof Josiah Elting
C-19 [1] (1737-1795),
his son, Ezekiel Elting D-36 (1763-1842) and his son, Jacob
Elting E-56 (1803-1889).
Roelof Josiah Elting
C-19 was born to Captain Josia Elting and Magdalene DuBois in
1737. In 1760 he married Mary Louw in 1760 at Kingston and had
eleven children. Roelof occupied the Bevier-Elting House (now
owned and operated as a museum by the Huguenot Historical Society)
during the Revolutionary Period, where he kept a store, that
was apparently started by his father, Josiah. Roelof sided with
Conferentia party during the Coetus-Conferentia controversy
in the Dutch Reformed Church during the 1750's and 1760's. In
1766, Roelof, along with members of the DuBois, Low, Van Wagnenen,
Van Vliet, Ean and Auchmody families, left the Dutch reformed
Church at New Paltz and organized the Conferentia Church, or
“Owl Church,” on Libertyville Road in New Paltz. [2]
The church disbanded and rejoined the Reformed Church in
1774.
Roelof J. Elting was
imprisoned as a suspected Tory during the Revolutionary War,
despite the fact that he signed the Articles of Association
in 1775 (Sylvester). Along with his brother Solomon and friend
Cadwaller Colden, Jr., Roelof was banished to British-occupied
New York . [3] Despite
these problems, Roelof still managed to gain enough respect
in the community to be elected to two municipal offices: Superintendent
of Highways to the Hudson River (1772-1773) and Overseer of
the Poor (1790). Roelof also served as one of the New Paltz
Twelve Men for the share of Louis DuBois from 1791 to 1795.
He died in 1795.
Roelof's second son Ezekiel
Elting D-39 was born on Oct. 9, 1763, and in 1787 married Magdalene
Elting D-35 (1769-1831), daughter of Abraham Elting and Dina
DuBois. Ezekiel and Magdalene bore ten children. Ezekiel inherited
the family homestead from his father and continued the family
business. According to Heidgerd, “He was probably the most important
business man in the community. He conducted a mercantile establishment
in the house he built in 1799 on Huguenot Street, now known
as the LeFevre House,” [4]
(and also invariably as the “1799 House” and “Ezekiel Elting
House”). This house is now owned and operated as a historic
house museum by the Huguenot Historical Society. In 1800 he
became a member by confession of the Reformed Dutch Church of
New Paltz and served as Deacon from 1802-1803 and was elected
Elder in 1812. [5] (RDC,
p. 70). Active in local politics, Ezekiel served as one of the
New Paltz “Twelve Men” for the patentee's share of Louis DuBois
(1797, 1801-1824), and as Overseer of Highways (1793-1795).
[6]
In 1822 Ezekiel entered
into a partnership with his brother-in-law Peter LeFevre to
build a grist mill, sawmill, fulling mill and woolen factory
at Dashville Falls in the town of Esopus . [7]
Ezekiel also engaged in the manufacture of potash and owned
and operated a farm. According to Sylvester, “He was a man of
correct business habits, of strict integrity, always ready to
lend a helping hand to worth young men, but most intolerant
of wrong-doing in any one. A man of excellent judgement, his
advice was often sought by his neighbors. He was a Federalist
in politics.” [8] Ezekiel
Elting died on December 12, 1842.
Ezekiel's son, Jacob
Elting E-56 was born on Mar. 27, 1803 and in 1827 married Gitty
LeFevre
(1805-1841), daughter
of Simon M. LeFevre and Elizabeth Deyo, by whom he had five
children. After the Gitty's death in 1841, he married Elizabeth
LeFevre (1805-1886) daughter of Peter LeFevre Jr. and Magdalene
Elting, and had three children. As a boy Jacob attended district
school at New Paltz ,and one term at the Esopus select school.
“In 1839 Mr. Elting purchased of Elida Watkins the farm in Lloyd
formerly owned by his uncle Solomon, and here he spent the latter
half of his life.” Like his father, Jacob was a member of the
Reformed Dutch Church of new Paltz, where he served as Elder.
In politics he was a Republican. [9]
(Syl. p. 130a)
Jacob also established
the Jacob Elting Burying Ground Association in 1875 for the
purpose of operating a small private family cemetery on Huguenot
Street in New Paltz. The organization is still presently active.
Jacob Elting died on August 12, 1889.
Collection Description
The papers are organized
into two series: 1) Account Books, and 2) Papers, which include
correspondence, estate and legal papers, financial papers, genealogical
research materials and miscellaneous papers. The bulk of the
collection falls between 1768 and 1843.
The records of major
interest are found in the correspondence files. The existence
of letters prior to 1800 in Ulster County is quite rare and
the letters of Roelof J. and Ezekiel Elting and Andries, Bryant
and Simon DeWitt provide an excellent source of information
on life in Ulster County during the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries. Letters to and from Roelof Elting discuss
a lawsuit with Benjamin Decker; various notes and bonds against
the Eltings; slaves and goods received from Lt. Col. Burr (1778);
local religious, political and family matters; a sale of property
in Chenango, Broome County (undated); shipping flaxseed and
other domestic goods to merchants in New York City, and the
events surrounding several boundary disputes with the New Paltz
Patent in the 1790's. Of specific interest is a letter from
Johannes Snyder to the Friends of Constitutional Liberty Committee
(Roelof J. Elting, Dirck Wynkoop, David Hasbrouck, Philip Elting
and John Dumont) concerning a meeting at R. J. Elting's house
“to Collect their
Sense on the late daring
attack on the Rights of Suffrage by the Majority of Conversers.”
The correspondence of
the DeWitt family includes a letter from Bryant DeWitt to his
father Andries DeWitt concerns Gen. Scott's military expeditions
against Native Americans in Kentucky (1792); several letters
concerning the death of Nathaniel Bevier in 1795; a letter to
Johannes Hoornbeck of Wawarsing from A. DeWitt concerning a
bond to Nathan Vernooy (1797); letter to Andries DeWitt discussing
relations between the United States and France (1798); and letters
describing the work of physicians in Albany, yellow fever in
Philadelphia, local politics and the media. And one undated
letter (ca. 1800) gives descriptions and opinions of alterations
being made to a house. Other correspondents include Henricus
Schoonmaker, Cornelius Elting, Elting Varick, Johannes Jansen,
Elizabeth DeWitt and David Graham.
Another batch of letters
written to Jacob Elting, while he served as Elder of Reformed
Dutch Church of New Paltz. These letters document the consistory's
efforts to acquire a new pastor in 1844. These include a letter
of recommendation of Rev. Ransford Wells of Troy, New York,
and letters from Jacob A. Lansing; Ch. Whitehead, pastor of
the Ref. Dutch Church of Walden; Henry Ostrander, Catherine
Jansen, and William A. Cornell. One letter concerns the plans
of the Executive Committee of the Ulster County Agricultural
Society to inspect local farms (1844), and another letter from
1864 describes local efforts to send gift boxes to the 156th
Regiment during the Civil War.
Also of interest in this
collection are the several account books kept by Roelof and
Ezekiel Elting. The accounts books of Roelof Elting date from
1768 to 1791 and primarily relate to the family store located
in the Bevier-Elting House on Huguenot Street in New Paltz.
These books document transactions involving the purchase and
sale of domestic goods, foodstuffs, kitchen supplies, textiles
and clothing, hardware, and specialty items such as tobacco,
snuff, writing supplies, and other items. The accounts in these
books are fairly scattered with not apparent organizational
scheme. Among these five account books are two books containing
entries deserving specific mention. One appears to be a store
inventory from 1768 listing all the items in the store, although
the prices are not listed. Another book contains journal-style
entries from 1776 and 1777 written by Roelof Elting concerning
his imprisonment as a suspected British sympathizer during the
Revolutionary War.
Four more account books
kept by Ezekiel Elting span the years from 1821 to 1845 and
mainly relate to mill and farm expenses. The majority of the
entries concern the purchase and sale of grains such as rye,
corn, buckwheat, and wheat. Also present, however, are numerous
entries documenting payments to laborers for sawing and chopping
wood, carding wool, harvesting crops, and various other tasks.
A name index at the beginning of each book serves as the main
point of access to individual accounts. Another account book
kept by Ezekiel Elting and his brother can be found in a collection
of papers located at the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection
at the Elting Memorial Library in New Paltz. A brief description
of this collection is provided below.
The estate papers mainly
consist of bonds, deeds, mortgages, property descriptions, probate
records, court papers, and agreements concerning properties
in Ulster County (particularly New Paltz and Lloyd) owned by
the Elting family in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Of interest are deeds of the Hasbrouck, Bevier, Deyo, LeFevre,
Donaldson, and Roelof and Josiah and Noah Elting families (1703-1767);
estate inventories of Roelof J. Elting (1773, 1779 and 1795)
[10] , Edmond Turner
(undated), Elizabeth Schutt (1790), Nathaniel Bevier (1796),
Mary Elting (1801); Mariah(?) DuBois (1839) and wills and probate
records of Josiah Elting (1784) and Ezekiel Elting (1843). Several
of the legal papers from the later nineteenth century concern
the New Paltz Turnpike.
Also of note are undated
field books to tracts and lots in the New Paltz Patent; undated
copybook of Simeon DeWitt, Surveyor General of New York State;
a receipt and agreement concerning the Reformed Church of New
Paltz (1774-1790); register of poor persons applying for relief
(1790); and account books, one of which contains entries written
by Roelof Josiah Elting describing his imprisonment and probation
during the Revolutionary War. There is also a document dating
from 1810 drawn up by “The Society of Negroes Unsettled” of
which Ezekiel Elting was elected foreman, provides evidence
of attempts by the slave owners in New Paltz to solve the problem
of runaway slaves. This document also lists several slaves who
ran away from their owners. An attached document contains a
list of persons and their supposed whereabouts. It is uncertain
if these persons are runaway slaves or free blacks who may provide
refuge to the runaways. Also contained in the collection are
albumen print photographs from the mid-late 19 th century of
Clarence Elting, Maggie Peters, Myron and Gertrude Wurtz, and
one tintype of Esther Elting. Two other photographs show the
Mohonk Mountain House across Lake Mohonk and an unidentified
Federal-style brick house with 1 st and 2 nd story porches that
was presumably the residence of Clarence Elting.
Other collections of
New Paltz historic papers providing further information of the
Elting and collateral families and relative subjects include
the LeFevre Family Papers: “The Bontecoe LeFevre's” (1703-1937),
the Locust Lawn Collection (1672-1969), the Jacob
Elting Burying Ground Association Records (1875-1998) -
contains some access restrictions, and several collections of
DuBois and Hasbrouck family papers in the Huguenot Historical
Society Archives. A Bible that belonged to Andries DeWitt is
housed in the Huguenot Historical Society Bible Collection,
Bible #41. The Elting Family Papers (1752-1927) located
at the Elting Memorial Library Haviland-Heidgerd Historical
Collection in New Paltz contains papers relative to this family,
including an account book (1798-1799) and estate inventory (1843)
of Ezekiel Elting; letters primarily of Ann Elting and Cornelius
C. Elting (1837-1874); a military exemption of Josiah Elting
(1864); marriage certificates of various Elting family members;
and genealogical research materials. The overall condition of
the papers is good and the handwriting legible. Some documents
show signs of damage from tearing or fading. Signatures from
several of the legal papers dating from the 18 th century have
at some time been removed.
Series Descriptions
Series 1: Account
Books (1767-1837) 0.5 cu. ft.
Contains nine account
books kept by Roelof Josiah Elting and his son Ezekiel Elting.
The five small account books of Roelof Elting pertain to items
bought and sold at the family store, church expenses and other
accounts owed to him by those with whom he did business. One
account book describes his imprisonment and probation during
the Revolutionary War. Accounts in these books are generally
sporadic and may have supplemented more complete daybooks or
yearly ledgers. The four account books of Ezekiel Elting are
legal size, bound ledgers, which contain personal name indexes;
one account book, (1827-1833) contains no index, despite following
the same system as the others. The transactions generally pertain
to the purchases and sales of domestic goods such as wheat,
corn, liquor, leather, etc.; and also payments for labor. This
series also includes one folder of loose papers that may have
come from another account book, and one name index to several
unidentified account books.
Series 2: Papers
(1703-1928) 1 cu. ft.
This series includes
letters, deeds, wills, survey maps, inventories, bills, receipts,
photographs, postcards, newspaper clippings, poetry and memorabilia.
Papers are filed alphabetically by format (correspondence, estate
and legal, financial, genealogy, miscellaneous) and thereunder
chronologically. Oversize documents are housed separately in
Box 4 .
Box and Folder
List
Box
1
Series 1: Account
Books (1767-1837)
Roelof J. Elting (1767-1791)
Ezekiel Elting:
(1823-1834)
(1826-1837)
(1827-1833)
(1834-1837)
Box
2
Series 2: Papers
(1703-1928)
Correspondence (1750-1870
scattered)
Estate and Legal Papers:
(1769-1789
and undated)
(1790-1821
and undated)
(1827-1901)
Box
3
Series 2: Papers
(1703-1928)
Financial Papers:
(1770-1844
and undated, scattered)
(1773-1870
and undated, scattered) Receipts
Genealogical Notes of
the Elting and LeFevre Families (1908 and undated)
Miscellaneous (ca. 1800-1928)
Photographs (mid-late
19 th century)
Box
4
Series 2: Papers
(1703-1928) OVERSIZE
Estate and Legal Papers:
(1703-1767)
(1778-1798)
(1800-1899)
(1709 and
undated) Property Survey Maps
[1]
Identification numbers are taken from The Elting Family
, Book I, compiled by William & Ruth P. Heidgerd and
published by the Huguenot Historical Society, Inc. New Paltz
, New York (1989). Unless otherwise noted, all genealogical
information is taken from this source.
[2]
LeFevre, Ralph. History of New Paltz and Its Old Families.
Albany , New York . Fort Orange Press (1909): p. 148-151,
491.
[3]
Heidgerd, p. 10.
[4]
Ibid., p. 25.
[5]
Records of the Reformed Dutch Church of New Paltz ,
New York . Collections of the Holland Society of New York
, vol. 3. The Knickerboxer Press , New York (1896): p. 70.
[6]
Information pertaining to membership in the "Twelve
Men" and local government is taken from the New Paltz
Civil Organization Records (1677-1838): "Proceedings
of the Twelve Men (1738-1772)" and the "Annual Election
of the Freeholders and Inhabitants of the Patent of the New
Paltz" Meeting Minutes (1751-1823) - Book 1. mss. coll.
Huguenot Historical Society Archives, New Paltz , NY .
[7]
Heidgerd, p. 17. For information on Peter LeFevre, see
the LeFevre Family Papers: The Bontecoe LeFevres (1703-1905),
also maintained in the Huguenot Historical Society Archives
mss. coll.
[8]
Sylvester, Nathaniel Bartlett. History of Ulster County
... Philadelphia , Everts & Peck (1880).
[9]
Ibid.
[10]
A 1795 vendue list of Roelof Elting's estate is located
in the Garret and Roelof DuBois Family Papers (1771-1882).
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