VALENTINE, David

VALENTINE, David

Male 1689 - 1743  (54 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  VALENTINE, David was born on 5 May 1689 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA (son of VALENTINE, Richard and HALSTEAD, Sarah); died on 6 Oct 1743 in Musketacove, Nassau, New York, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 11 Mar 1719, Musquito Cove, Nassau, New York, USA

    Notes:

    From Valentines in America:

    David Valentine, of Hempstead, L.I., was born in May, l689, and married, about 1716, Charity, daughter of Nathan and Rachel Coles, of Musketo-cove (now Glen Cove, L. I.). Charity was born Sept. 1, 1695. Shortly after marriage he must have removed to Glen Cove to live, as on the 11th of March, 1719-20, he bought of his father-in-law property described as follows : "All that certain messuage or homestead where I ye said Nathan Coles now dwelleth in Musketo-cove," &c., paying therefore 500 pounds. This place has never passed out of the family, being now in possession of the daughters of the late Ellwood Valentine. The will of David bears date Oct. 6, 1743. In it he mentions "daughter Sarah when she shall be 21," his wife Charity, and son Jacob ; also granddaughter " Phebe Coles;" They had one son and four daughters.

    Residence:
    Shortly after marriage he must have removed to Glen Cove to live, as on the 11th of March, 1719-20, he bought of his father-in-law's property

    Died:
    The will of David bears date Oct. 6, 1743

    David married COLES, Charity in Apr 1716. Charity (daughter of COLES, Nathan and HOPKINS, Rachel) was born on 1 Sep 1695 in Musquito Cove, Nassau, New York, USA; died on 26 Oct 1743. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Marriage
    Date: APR 1716
    Place: New York, USA«s103 Online publication - Ancestry.com. OneWorldTree [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: MyFamily.com, Inc.»

    Children:
    1. VALENTINE, Charity was born on 30 Apr 1717 in Queens, Lewis, New York, USA; died on 26 Oct 1743.
    2. VALENTINE, Jacob was born on 22 Dec 1718 in Glen Cove; died on 26 Oct 1743 in Glen Cove.
    3. VALENTINE, Mary was born on 17 Jul 1721; died on 26 Nov 1743.
    4. VALENTINE, Sarah was born on 11 Nov 1725; died on 26 Oct 1743.
    5. VALENTINE, Phebe was born on 4 Apr 1735.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  VALENTINE, Richard was born in 1650 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA (son of VALENTINE, Richard); died in 1725 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    Richard (VALENTINE) of Hempstead Harbour, whose will 1725 mentions wife Sarah, eldson son Richard, youngest son Jonathan, other son David, daus. Sarah Smith, Phebe Downing, Ann Carle. Hannah Pine

    Richard married HALSTEAD, Sarah in 1680 in NY. Sarah (daughter of HALSTEAD, Timothy and WILLIAMS, Hannah) was born on 2 Oct 1660 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA; died in 1723 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  HALSTEAD, Sarah was born on 2 Oct 1660 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA (daughter of HALSTEAD, Timothy and WILLIAMS, Hannah); died in 1723 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA.

    Notes:

    From Hughes: Wife Sarah was probably dau. of Timothy Halstead, who in will 1686 devises to son-in-law Richard Valentine, Timothy Halstead's wife was dau. of Henry and Anne Pearsall

    Notes:

    Marriage
    Date: 1681

    Children:
    1. 1. VALENTINE, David was born on 5 May 1689 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA; died on 6 Oct 1743 in Musketacove, Nassau, New York, USA.
    2. VALENTINE, Richard was born before 1689.
    3. VALENTINE, Jonathan was born after 1689.
    4. VALENTINE, Sarah
    5. VALENTINE, Phebe
    6. VALENTINE, Ann
    7. VALENTINE, Hannah


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  VALENTINE, Richard was born about 1617 in England; died before 1685 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • EARL: Y

    Notes:

    From Valentines in America

    Hempstead was originally one of the largest towns in territory on the Island, extending from the Sound on the north to the Atlantic on the south, and from Oyster Bay on the east to Jamaica on the west. The first division of land among the sixty-six proprietors of the town took place in 1647, hardly a quarter of a century after the Pilgrims at Plymouth, and the ad- vent of the Dutch in New York. Among these was

    RICHARD VALENTINE,

    then probably a young man of twenty-five or thirty years of age, but whether married or single I have no means of knowing. He was of English origin, and, from the fact that some of the company came from that section, as well as the identity of name, it is not at all improbable that he was a lineal descendant of Richard Valentine of the parish of Eccles in Lancastershire, the undoubted ancestor of the New England Valentines, more fully mentioned in another chapter— which, if my conjectures are correct, would seem to prove that these two great branches have one common origin.

    Of this first American Valentine, but little is known, for the public and private records of those days were but imperfectly kept. He must have been married soon after immigrating if not before, for, in 1685, he had four sons, and perhaps more, who were freeholders. In a tax laid that year, Widow Richard Valentine is assessed for 40 acres, Obadiah, 44, William, 40, Ephraim, 40, and Richard (Jr.), 71 acres. Besides these. I find from the N. Y. Calendar of Hist. MSS., that in Feb., 1679, Jonah Valentine of Hempstead petitioned the Governor for a grant of 100 acres of land. Moreover, I find from the same source that in 1679 Richard Valentine (Jr.), "one of the Hempstead rioters," asks to be exempted from punishment "on account of his youth and ignorance." As mention is made of Richard Valentine (Sen.), in 1682, and of his widow in 1785, it seems clear that he must have died between those years, leaving at least five sons, and several daughters. There is a tradition in the family that the farm of the original Richard contained 600 acres — which probably included some "out-lots" or wild lands, as well as the homesteads named in the foregoing list.

    But if the young Richard came to grief from his " sky-larking " propensities, his paternal ancestor could hardly reprove him, for he, too, had his own troubles. In the "Colonial History of the Slate of New York," Vol. II., Page 728, I find that "the Marshal of the town of Hemstede, Richard Valentyn by name," is complained of before the [Dutch] Governor- General and Council of New Netherlands, July 7, 1674, for refusing to put in execution a judgment against one Jeremy Wood, and " for uttering these seditious words: ' Is it in the name of the King of England? for I will do nothing in the name of the Prince or of the States of Holland,' " &c. True to his English origin, the Marshal found the Dutch Government a galling yoke to bear. It would seem, however, that neither father nor son received any severe punishment, or some mention would have been made of it.

    In the stirring events of that period, the Valentines appear to have taken an active part. Thus, in 1702, Richard Valentine was one of the Grand Jury raised especial!}- to indict Samuel Bownes, an itinerant Quaker preacher who came to that region ; but instead of doing so, the jury endorsed the paper “Ignoramus" and returned it to the Judge, utterly refusing to have anything to do with such dirty work. Many of Richard's posterity afterwards became " Friends " them- selves, and some remain such to this day.

    In 1726, Obadiah Valentine was one of a committee to put a stop to the " wicked and wanton burning of Hempstede Plains."

    Of this family of Richard Valentine and his five sons, there is not, so far as I can learn, any continuous and authentic genealogy in existence; but it is certain that nearly all the Valentines of Long Island, except those in the city of Brooklyn (and even many in that city also), have descended from these. The family name soon extended to adjoining towns, especially to Oyster Bay, Jamaica and Flushing, until finally it was common in every town in Queens County, and was occasionally found in the other counties of Long Island, Kings and Suffolk.

    Children:
    1. 2. VALENTINE, Richard was born in 1650 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA; died in 1725 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA.
    2. VALENTINE, Obadiah
    3. VALENTINE, William
    4. VALENTINE, Ephraim
    5. VALENTINE, Jonah

  2. 6.  HALSTEAD, Timothy was born about 1630 in Hempstead, NY (son of HALSTEAD, Jonas and SARAH); died in 1703.

    Timothy married WILLIAMS, Hannah. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  WILLIAMS, Hannah
    Children:
    1. 3. HALSTEAD, Sarah was born on 2 Oct 1660 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA; died in 1723 in Hempstead, Nassau, New York, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  HALSTEAD, Jonas (son of HALSTEAD, Abraham and SUSAN).

    Jonas married SARAH. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  SARAH
    Children:
    1. 6. HALSTEAD, Timothy was born about 1630 in Hempstead, NY; died in 1703.



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