Frederick Simon Van Patten

Advertisement

Frederick Simon Van Patten

Birth
Schenectady, Schenectady County, New York, USA
Death
3 Nov 1846 (aged 67)
Glenville, Schenectady County, New York, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
His burial was most likely in the Old Van Patten Cemetery on Barhydt Rd., Glenville, NY or the First Reformed Dutch Churchyard in Glenville. His gravestone has not been found. According to grandson, Harmon, Frederick's father "Simon F Van Patten was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and himself and wife assisted in throwing overboard the objectionable cargo of tea into Boston Harbor" - an unlikely tale!
He married Sally Bartlett August 29, 1801 in Florida, Minaville, Montgomery County, NY.
Here is an item from the 1821 Schenectady Cabinet:
BY virtue of a w r i t of test. fi. fa. issued out of the supreme
court and to the directed and delivered, against the goods
and chattels; lands and tenements of Simon Van P a t t e n and
Frederick S: Van Patten, I have seized and taken and shall
expose to .sale as the l aw directs, at H. Davis'Schenectady
coffee-house, on the twenty-first day of July next 1821, at eleven
o'clock in t h e fore n o o n , all the right and title of the said
Simon and Frederick S. of, in and to all that certain farm,
piece or parcel of land, together with the buildings thereon,
situate in the town of G l e n v i l l e , bounded southerly by John
Haverley and the Mohawk turnpike, easterly by the heirs of
Nicholas Van Patten, northerly by the common lands belonging
to the town of Glenville, westerly by a lane running between
s a i d farm and land of John S. Barheydt and land belonging
to the heirs of Nicholas Van Patten, supposed to contain
about one hundred and twelve acres, and now in the
possession of John B . Van Patten.-Dated June 4, 1821 .
Isaac Riggs, late Sheriff
His burial was most likely in the Old Van Patten Cemetery on Barhydt Rd., Glenville, NY or the First Reformed Dutch Churchyard in Glenville. His gravestone has not been found. According to grandson, Harmon, Frederick's father "Simon F Van Patten was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and himself and wife assisted in throwing overboard the objectionable cargo of tea into Boston Harbor" - an unlikely tale!
He married Sally Bartlett August 29, 1801 in Florida, Minaville, Montgomery County, NY.
Here is an item from the 1821 Schenectady Cabinet:
BY virtue of a w r i t of test. fi. fa. issued out of the supreme
court and to the directed and delivered, against the goods
and chattels; lands and tenements of Simon Van P a t t e n and
Frederick S: Van Patten, I have seized and taken and shall
expose to .sale as the l aw directs, at H. Davis'Schenectady
coffee-house, on the twenty-first day of July next 1821, at eleven
o'clock in t h e fore n o o n , all the right and title of the said
Simon and Frederick S. of, in and to all that certain farm,
piece or parcel of land, together with the buildings thereon,
situate in the town of G l e n v i l l e , bounded southerly by John
Haverley and the Mohawk turnpike, easterly by the heirs of
Nicholas Van Patten, northerly by the common lands belonging
to the town of Glenville, westerly by a lane running between
s a i d farm and land of John S. Barheydt and land belonging
to the heirs of Nicholas Van Patten, supposed to contain
about one hundred and twelve acres, and now in the
possession of John B . Van Patten.-Dated June 4, 1821 .
Isaac Riggs, late Sheriff

Gravesite Details

Third Great Grandfather



See more Van Patten memorials in:

Flower Delivery