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Resolved Waldron

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Resolved Waldron

Birth
Amsterdam, Amsterdam Municipality, Noord-Holland, Netherlands
Death
17 May 1690 (aged 80)
Harlem, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Birth info from The European Origin and Ancestry of Joseph and Resolved Waldron published in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society quarterly, vol. 126, p. 113-115. However, he gave age in 1645 as 25, which puts birth at 1620.

Married Rebecca Hendricks on 20 Aug 1645 in Diemen, suburb of Amsterdam. She died in 1653. Their marriage intention notes Resalvert Walderren, of A, book printer apprentice, 25, no parents, married Rebecca Hendricks, of A.

Married Tanneke Nagel on 10 May 1654. Marriage intention reads: Resolvert Waldron, of A, book printer, widowe and Tanneka Nagels, of Groningen, 30, parents dead of Westindeshuys.

Resolved and Tanneke immigrated to New York in 1654.

He and Tanneke Nagel are my 9th great-grandparents through their son Barent Waldron.

In 1686, Resolved was a patantee of Haarlem, New York.

Inventory for his estate said he died on or before 17 May 1690.

I'm told he's buried in the Dutch cemetery in Harlem (which was 125th St) in Manhattan. The site of Church and graveyard is currently a bus depot and before that there were tenements on the site.

NOTE: All the interments for the Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery of Harlem, New York were moved to Woodlawn Cemetery, 501 East 233rd Street, Bronx County, Bronx, NY. The move was done in 1875. Please see the New York Historical Society for more information.

Disinterments from the Vaults and Churchyard of the Dutch Reformed Church of Harlem, 1869-1875
Prompted by New York City's northward growth, the Consistory of the Dutch Reformed Church of Harlem purchased a plot in Woodlawn Cemetery in 1869. The remains interred in its old cemetery in First Avenue between 124th and 125th Streets, and also those in the churchyard on Third Avenue and 121st Street, were removed to the plot in Woodlawn; the transfer was completed in 1875. A manuscript file containing documentation relevant to this process has been digitized and made available in the elibrary of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record.

This source - My Inwood, http://myinwood.net/the-old-nagle-cemetery/ - also provides information. (Found by Debbie)

Sources: Origin and Ancestry of Joseph and Resolved Waldron, New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 126, No. 1, p. 24 and Harlem Register by Riker

The monument photo is from "The Old Nagle Cemetery," posted May 9, 2013, to My Inwood.

Transcription at top: About this stone rest the remains of 417 -- -- early settlers and soldiers of the Colonial and National wars interred 1664-1908 in Nagel Cemetery, West 212nd Street, Manhattan. The site of which was covered by a vast public improvement. Re-interred here 1926-1927 by the City of New York.

Names: Adell, Armstrong, Austin, Beaumont, Berrian, Bierck, Bogardus, Bolton, Bowers, Brown, Bussing, Cecil, Chapman, Childs, Clemens, Clement, Clifford, Conklin, Cregier, Cute, Davis, Delamater, Douglas, Dyckman, Garrison, George, Gross, Grote, Grout, Guiman, Hadley, Haley, Holstead.

Names on another side: Hale, Horn, Hyatt, Jones, Lockwood, Miller, Moore, Montgomery, Myer, Nagel, Newman, Nodine, Oakley, Oblenus, Odell, Post, Riker, Rockwood, Rogers, Ryer, Ryon, Sage, Sherman, Siemon, Smith, Sowerly, Thison, Tourneur, Townsend, Vail, Vermilya, Verveelen, Wagner, Waldron, Warner, Williams

Bottom: Erected 1936 by the Board of Transportation of the City of New York
Birth info from The European Origin and Ancestry of Joseph and Resolved Waldron published in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society quarterly, vol. 126, p. 113-115. However, he gave age in 1645 as 25, which puts birth at 1620.

Married Rebecca Hendricks on 20 Aug 1645 in Diemen, suburb of Amsterdam. She died in 1653. Their marriage intention notes Resalvert Walderren, of A, book printer apprentice, 25, no parents, married Rebecca Hendricks, of A.

Married Tanneke Nagel on 10 May 1654. Marriage intention reads: Resolvert Waldron, of A, book printer, widowe and Tanneka Nagels, of Groningen, 30, parents dead of Westindeshuys.

Resolved and Tanneke immigrated to New York in 1654.

He and Tanneke Nagel are my 9th great-grandparents through their son Barent Waldron.

In 1686, Resolved was a patantee of Haarlem, New York.

Inventory for his estate said he died on or before 17 May 1690.

I'm told he's buried in the Dutch cemetery in Harlem (which was 125th St) in Manhattan. The site of Church and graveyard is currently a bus depot and before that there were tenements on the site.

NOTE: All the interments for the Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery of Harlem, New York were moved to Woodlawn Cemetery, 501 East 233rd Street, Bronx County, Bronx, NY. The move was done in 1875. Please see the New York Historical Society for more information.

Disinterments from the Vaults and Churchyard of the Dutch Reformed Church of Harlem, 1869-1875
Prompted by New York City's northward growth, the Consistory of the Dutch Reformed Church of Harlem purchased a plot in Woodlawn Cemetery in 1869. The remains interred in its old cemetery in First Avenue between 124th and 125th Streets, and also those in the churchyard on Third Avenue and 121st Street, were removed to the plot in Woodlawn; the transfer was completed in 1875. A manuscript file containing documentation relevant to this process has been digitized and made available in the elibrary of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record.

This source - My Inwood, http://myinwood.net/the-old-nagle-cemetery/ - also provides information. (Found by Debbie)

Sources: Origin and Ancestry of Joseph and Resolved Waldron, New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 126, No. 1, p. 24 and Harlem Register by Riker

The monument photo is from "The Old Nagle Cemetery," posted May 9, 2013, to My Inwood.

Transcription at top: About this stone rest the remains of 417 -- -- early settlers and soldiers of the Colonial and National wars interred 1664-1908 in Nagel Cemetery, West 212nd Street, Manhattan. The site of which was covered by a vast public improvement. Re-interred here 1926-1927 by the City of New York.

Names: Adell, Armstrong, Austin, Beaumont, Berrian, Bierck, Bogardus, Bolton, Bowers, Brown, Bussing, Cecil, Chapman, Childs, Clemens, Clement, Clifford, Conklin, Cregier, Cute, Davis, Delamater, Douglas, Dyckman, Garrison, George, Gross, Grote, Grout, Guiman, Hadley, Haley, Holstead.

Names on another side: Hale, Horn, Hyatt, Jones, Lockwood, Miller, Moore, Montgomery, Myer, Nagel, Newman, Nodine, Oakley, Oblenus, Odell, Post, Riker, Rockwood, Rogers, Ryer, Ryon, Sage, Sherman, Siemon, Smith, Sowerly, Thison, Tourneur, Townsend, Vail, Vermilya, Verveelen, Wagner, Waldron, Warner, Williams

Bottom: Erected 1936 by the Board of Transportation of the City of New York

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  • Created by: Lisa
  • Added: Dec 13, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81910765/resolved-waldron: accessed ), memorial page for Resolved Waldron (10 May 1610–17 May 1690), Find a Grave Memorial ID 81910765, citing Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, Bronx County, New York, USA; Maintained by Lisa (contributor 47372364).