Esther Sy

(about 1638 - before 1698)
Date this page was last edited=13 Oct 2014
Esther Sy was born about 1638 in Calais, France.1 She was the daughter of Pierre Sy.2

Esther Sy married Isaac See, son of Jean Sy, on 11 December 1657 at the French Church, Mannheim, Germany. The translation of the church record reads Isaac Sy, young man, residing at Friesenheim, son of the late Jean Sy, lifetime (Resident) of Nielles lès Calais, and Esther, daughter of Pierre Sy, residing at Mannheim, have been married in the French Church of Mannheim this 11th December, 1657.2

James Riker, in his 1904 book,3 states that Isaac and Esther had a son, Isaac Jr., whose wife was named Maria and who came to New York with them in 1674. Grenville Mackenzie's 1966 book states that Isaac Sie, Jr., was born in France probably about 1645.4 However, in an article published in 1979 in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Glenna See Hill5 argues that since the marriage record of Isaac Sy and Esther shows they were married in 1657, "there could not have been an Isaac, Jr. of marriageable age in 1674." Therefore, she concludes, the children listed by Riker and Mackenzie has having belonged to the non-existent Isaac Jr. were actually the children of Isaac Sr. The parent-child relations in the present work are based on this conclusion.

Esther Sy and Isaac See emigrated in 1674 from England to Harlem, New York, together with Nicholas de Vaux and his wife Marie.6

Esther Sy was listed on the membership roll the Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow, New York, dated 1697.7

Esther Sy died before 1698 in Tarrytown, Westchester County, New York.1

Children of Esther Sy and Isaac See

Citations

  1. [S917] "Ancestry of Clifton Lionel See," family tree at ancestry.com, link sent 12 October 2014 by Rena Forinash to Howard DeVoe.
  2. [S347] Glenna See Hill, "See and De Vaux Families", 100.
  3. [S208] Riker, Revised History of Harlem, 331.
  4. [S346] Mackenzie, Families of the Colonial Town of Philipsburgh, Vol. 2, p 621.
  5. [S347] Glenna See Hill, "See and De Vaux Families", 101.
  6. [S208] Riker, Revised History of Harlem, 327.
  7. [S347] Glenna See Hill, "See and De Vaux Families", 101; in the images available on Heritage Quest Online, the name is listed as a church member in the index but the page with the actual list is missing.


This family history is a work in progress. If you know of any errors or omissions, please contact me through the e-mail link at the bottom of the page.