Ten Eyck
by
Stefan Bielinski


The Ten Eycks were a German-ancestry family of New Netherland. Patriarch Coenradt Ten Eyck was shoemaker, tanner, and property holder in New Amsterdam who died within a few years of 1680.

His son, Jacob C. Ten Eyck moved from Manhattan to Albany after 1664 and married farmer's daughter Geertje Coeymans. Jacob practiced the shoemaker's trade and died in Albany about 1693. Geertie lived in their Albany house for several decades. Their children prospered and established the Ten Eyck family in Albany and in the upper Hudson region.

Their son,Coenradt (1678-1753), was a silversmith and the father of ten children - eight of whom married. His son, Jacob C. Ten Eyck (1705-93), was mayor of Albany in 1748.

Arriving in Albany after 1664, the Ten Eycks were a successful and prolific Albany-based family that branched out into the manor and beyond.

In 1756, eight Ten Eyck households were counted in the city. In 1790, the city of Albany had seven Ten Eyck-named households. By 1800, the family was in its fourth generation in the Albany setting!

Follow this link to an essay on the "last Ten Eyck in Albany."

Ten Eyck Avenue, Ten Eyck Insurance Company, Ten Eyck Plaza, and many Ten Eycks in the Albany phone book, the family is still prominent in Albany today!


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notes

Sources: Family-based material was first compiled by Jonathan Pearson, pp. 108-09. Genealogical information is summarized online in a number of places. Follow this link to more family material on this website!

A massive Ten Eyck family account book covering the first half of the eighteenth century in the collection of the Albany Institute of History and Art is an extremely promising resource to be explored!



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first posted: 3/30/02