
[ Click here to see an interesting sketch of old Nantucket ===>
]
We who are the descendants of Eliza Dingman (second
wife of Amos Gallup) have roots on the island of
Nantucket through Eliza's mother, Rebecca Macy.
Rebecca was born in 1789 and by the time she was
24 years old she had met and married Henry
Dingman, a man of Dutch ancestry whose ancestors
had pioneered the area around Hudson, NY,
especially the township of Claverack, NY.
Rebecca's
marriage to Henry is recorded in the Nantucket
Vital Records but in a manner suggesting it was an
off-island marriage, i.e., place and name of
spouse but no other details.
The people of
Nantucket were not typical of the aggressive
pioneers living elsewhere in the new nation; they
were seafaring people and tended to stay on their
Island; that comfortable home port isolated from
the vicissitudes and difficulties of pioneering a
wild new country. Accordingly, I had been very
curious to learn why Rebecca and the rest of her
family left the Island.
We don't know the
specific circumstances of Rebecca's meeting with
Henry but it occurred during the period covered by
the following old article. I found it while
visiting Nantucket in 1999. It provides not only a
historical reason for her emigration from
Nantucket but gives us a plausible reason for the
subsequent migration of Rebecca and Henry from the
Hudson, NY, area to the town of Jefferson in the
western part of New York state.
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HISTORIC NANTUCKET
Emigration from Nantucket to
Hudson, N.Y.
By CHARLES S. CLARK
From the Proceedings of the Nantucket Historical
Association
Thirty-fourth Annual Meeting, August 1, 1928
DURING A VISIT to
Nantucket in 1919, I was very much surprised to
find that very little seemed to be known regarding
the emigration to Hudson, N. Y., from 1783 to
1800. Histories of Nantucket contain but scant
mention of the event, and the Island seems to have
forgotten it, on the theory perhaps that if anyone
chooses to become an off-islander, he is not worth
remembrance.
As a descendant of
five proprietors of Nantucket, and of more than
five proprietors of Hudson, it is a pleasure to
respond to the invitation of President Macy, and
to endeavor to supply a few missing links in the
chain which binds together Nantucket and Hudson.
It is to be
presumed that the Sons and Daughters know of the
terrible distress on the Island, after the
Revolution. So great was the need for money that I
have been told (at Nantucket) that some of the old
houses now worth thousands of dollars were then
sold for fifty pounds apiece. If this seems
incredible let us remember that the whole upper
West Side of New York from 59th Street to about
86th Street was sold at about the same time for
fifty pounds. So poor were the Nantucket emigrants
to Hudson that they had no money to buy or build
homes, and so they took with them to Hudson their
houses, taken apart and shipped, piece by piece,
in the fishing vessels.
Urged by the
pressing necessities of their families and
friends, two noble men, Seth and Thomas Jenkins,
who had gone to Providence, and there accumulated
a fortune, proceeded to New York, in 1783, with a
hundred thousand dollars in their possession.
Their purpose was to seek a site for a new
Nantucket, in a fertile country, but near
navigable waters.
They first visited
Colonel Henry Rutgers, a business friend, who
owned a large farm on the lower east side of New
York City; approximately the area now enclosed
within Market, Division, Grand and Corlears
Streets, and the East River, and containing about
fifty blocks.
Driving a close and
hard bargain cost the descendants of the emigrants
at least one hundred millions. Rutgers was a
stubborn old Dutchman; the Jenkins brothers keen
Yankee business men. Only a difference of $200.00
separated the parties when they agreed to
disagree.
So the envoys went
on to Claverack Landing on the Hudson River and
were enchanted by what they saw. The land was
cheap and fertile, the view of the Catskill
Mountains and the River was magnificent. A deep
river swarming with fish promised ready access to
the sea, and the site was the natural port of a
rich country.
The few Dutch
settlers were hospitable and reasonable, and a
bargain was soon struck. Word was sent to
Nantucket, and in the autumn two families came
with their belongings; the family of Seth Jenkins,
consisting of his wife, Dinah Folger, and four
children, Dinal Coffin, and John Alsop and his
family. In the spring of 1784 the other
proprietors arrived in several vessels, with their
families. Their leader was Stephen Paddock, who at
once, with Thomas Jenkins became prominent in the
settlement.
The other
proprietors were: Joseph Barnard, Benjamin Folger,
Seth Jenkins, William Hall, Hezekiah Dayton, David
Lawrence, Titus Morgan, Reuben Macy, Cotton
Gelston, John Alsop, Charles Jenkins, Ezra Reed,
Gideon Gardner, John Thurston, Nathaniel Greene.
The original
eighteen proprietors subsequently increased their
number to thirty; and in the Hudson records of the
next few years appear these names of first
settlers: David Bunker, Redwood Easton, Nathan
Folger, Alexander Coffin, Peter Barnard, Daniel
Paddock, Obed Sears, John Hathaway, Solomon
Bunker, Laban Paddock, Robert Barnard, Elihu
Bunker, Daniel Clark, Zephaniah Coffin, Judah
Coffin, George Clark, Shubael Worth.
On November 14,
1784, it was unanimously resolved to call the
settlement Hudson, in spite of the wishes
expressed by the Governor and by many settlers
that it be called "Clinton," or
"New Nantucket." At the same time the
site of the present city was purchased from
Colonel Van Alen and Lendert Hardick, Colonel Van
Alen being given a thirtieth share as proprietor.
As in Nantucket,
the land was divided into house lots and water, or
fishing lots; the water lots being laid out on the
Harbor.
A large majority of
the settlers were Quakers, and these erected a
meeting house during the first year of settlement.
Their meeting house on Union Street, which existed
until recent years, was almost a copy of the
meeting house now owned by the Nantucket
Historical Association. The Hudson Quakers to the
second and third generation were charming people,
gentlemen and gentlewomen to their finger tips,
the men merchant princes, the women sweet and
lovely with the peace of God. A little poem by
Stephen Miller well describes them:
Full fourscore years and ten ago
From those lone and seagert places,
Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket,
Came the Folgers, Jenkins, Macys,
And the Paddocks, Worths, And Daytons,
And there were Coffins, full a score,
With many more, a home to find
On North River's quiet shore.
They are all gone, and in our streets
Of those plain days there scarce a trace is
Little save the names are left us
Of the Bunkers, Barnards, Macys,
Simple in heart, peace-loving men,
With sober-minded worthy dames,
All sweet within, and drab without,
And all with good old Scripture names.
For their
livelihood, the settlers turned to the pursuits of
their forefathers, whaling, fishing, sealing,
shipbuilding and its attendant industries.
Twentyfive vessels were brought from Nantucket by
1786, and shipbuilding commenced at once. Jenkins
and Gelston launched the first ship, called the
"Hudson," in 1786, and Robert Folger
took command. In the days of its prosperity,
Hudson outranked Nantucket as a whaling port,
having from first to last over 100 vessels in the
business of sealing and whaling. It was a Hudson
ship commanded by a Nantucket skipper, the
"American Hero," Captain Solomon Bunker,
which brought home the largest cargo of sperm oil
ever brought to America, in 1797; and it was the
"Ajax," Captain Zephaniah Coffin, which
broke the record in sealing. These ships, on the
outward and inward voyage, invariably stopped at
Nantucket, to visit the old home.
The prosperity of
Hudson in the first twenty years of its existence
was amazing. Nantucket men at Hudson were now able
to use to the fullest extent their native
shrewdness and enterprise. On March 1st, 1802, it
is recorded, no less than 2800 sleighs loaded with
freight and produce entered the city. Fifteen
vessels a day cleared from South Bay, a better
record than that of New York; and so crowded at
times was the Bay with vessels waiting to come up
to the wharves that people walked across the Bay
on the decks of vessels. Fishing, in the river,
was unbelievably successful. A hundred-ton ship
was filled with herring on one tide at Rogers
Island. The river swarmed, in the season, with the
delicious North River shad, and with gigantic
sturgeon. Sturgeon was usually known along the
river as "Albany Beef," and herring as
"Hudson pork." Hudson sausage was famous
far and wide, and to this day a gourmet will have
no other sort, if he is an old-timer in New York.
It is saddening to
record that all this prosperity was swept away,
first by British Orden in Council, French decrees
and the embargo; and secondly by the War of 1812
and the decline of the whaling industry. The birth
of the steamboat, which destroyed the Hudson
packet trade of the Paddocks and Clarks, was also
severely felt.
Banks failed in
Hudson, millions were lost, and many people
emigrated west, to the Lake County of New York, to
Rochester, and to Ohio and to Indiana. Hudson was
surrounded by feudal manors, the owners of which
would not sell land - only rent it. Consequently
those who wished to take up Government land were
obliged to go west.
Hudson from 1783 to
1860 produced many great men, nearly all of whom
were of Nantucket ancestry. Among them were Major
General William Jenkins Worth, the hero of the War
of 1812 and Mexican War, whose monument stands in
Madison Square, New York; Lieut. William Allen,
after whom Allen Street in New York is named;
Chief Justice Ambrose Spencer and Charles J.
Folger, Secretary of Treasury of the United
States; John C. Spencer, Judges Edmonds, Cowles,
Sutherland and Edwards; the great Captains Robert
Folger, Alexander Coffin, Zephaniah Coffin, Laban
Paddock, Robert Barnard and Judah Paddock; the
shipbuilders, Seth Jenkins, Thomas Jenkins, Cotton
Gelston, Obed Sears, and Charles Clark. The
celebrated People's Line on the Hudson owes its
origin to Hudson men, and Hudson, before the days
of steamboats, was the first to build packets
(that is to say - sloops) carrying passengers
only.
As might have been
expected, the settlers of Hudson took Nantucket as
their model in almost every conceivable way. The
lean-to houses, many with whale-walks or lookouts
on the roof, were replicas of the houses of
Nantucket; and the mansions of the wealthy were
copies of the mansions of Main Street, Nantucket.
The news at
Nantucket, as I have been told by my grandfather
and great grandmother, who was born in Nantucket,
was always a subject of keen interest. It was news
from Nantucket which gave rise to the famous joke
of David Lawrence. When told the Bank of Nantucket
had been robbed, he said, "They must have
left their latch string outside."
There was an
Academy and an Academy Hill, a Main Street, a
Federal Street, and others named after the
Nantucket streets. The arrival of famous ships
created as great an excitment as in the early days
of Nantucket, and a story is told of a famous
preacher who said on Sunday morning: "I am
glad to see so many at service, even though the
'American Hero' has arrived." The next moment
he was alone in the church, for he had innocently
brought the great news.
On the occasion of
my first visit to Hudson in boyhood I strolled out
on the parade, as it is called, the park facing
the Hudson. I met a few boys, who, seeing a
stranger, began to ask questions. One of the first
was, "Have you been around the Horn?"
Every boy in the group had except myself, and not
one was over fifteen.
The time limit will
not permit me to tell you more of this eldest
daughter of Nantucket. But may I express the hope
that an effort will be made to bring into closer
connection with the Societies of Nantucket
descendants, the descendants of the Hudson
emigrants. There are now thousands of these, who
are direct descendants of the original families
and pioneers of the Island. And hence there is no
apparent reason why New York should not have a
branch of the parent society of Sons and Daughters
of Nantucket.
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