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Myndert
Frederickse Van Iveren
Myndert Frederickse was born during the first decades of the seventeenth century. He emigrated to New Netherland and married Catharina Burger (Burghart) in New Amsterdam in 1656. That marriage was short-lived. He re-married in May 1663 to Albany resident Pieterje Teunis Van Vechten. The two marriages produced at least four sons and a daughter who played a large part in establishing the Myndertse or Van Iveren family in colonial New York.
Following
his older brother, Carsten Frederickse, by 1660 Myndert
had emerged as a fur trader in Beverwyck, Like his
brother, he also worked as a blacksmith. In 1668,
he was identified as a "master smith." He owned a house in the third ward, a smithy outside the south gate, and a garden and lot as well. In 1679, he was identified as an Albany householder. In 1697, three of his grown sons were living in Myndert's Albany home.
He
was a member and elder of the Albany Lutheran church.
He held farmland in Coxsackie and also owned slaves.
Myndert
Frederickse filed a will in March 1704. It named
his wife, four sons, and his daughter as heirs. His
holdings included real and personal property. He
died in 1705 and was buried from the Albany Dutch
church.
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Sources:
The life of Myndert Frederickse Van Iveren is CAP
biography number 2465. This profile is derived
chiefly from family and community-based resources.
By Stefan Bielinski, Colonial Albany Social History Project [http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/albany]
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