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Family
Children:
  1. Thomas Quick: Birth: ABT 1690 in New York, USA. Death: FEB 1756 in Delaware River


Notes
a. Note:   http://persi.heritagequestonline.com/hqoweb/library/do/books/results/image?urn=urn:proquest:US;glhbooks;Genealogy-glh12575404;45;-1;&polarity=&scale=
  A genealogy of the Quick family in America (1625-1942), 317 years
 South Haven, Mich.: Privately published by A.C. Quick, 1942, 508 pgs.
 Quick, Arthur Craig
  B 7 Dirck Theuniszen Quick (A1), bp 26 July 1648 in the New Amsterdam Dutch Church (BDC 24), d before 1702, as proved by indentures of his two sons; m. Hannah (Johanna, Anna) Jans in 1672. We have a record of four of their children (C41 - 45). The bp record of his third child in the same Dutch Church states he is the son of Dirck Quick and Anna Hodje. As to the identity of the mother there are three theories: first (and most likely), it may have been the same Hannah (or Anna) Jans, and that Hodje may have been her family name-a Dutch custom being that the family name is often omitted and the father's given name used instead. Second, she may have been a daughter of an English family Hodge which was living in New York at that time. Third, she may have been Anna deHooges, b. prob abt 1650, the second child of Anthony deHooges, in which case Dirck Quick would have been her second husband. The church records show that Anna deHooges m Warner Hornbeek and had 7 children baptized, the last on 19 Feb 1688. Date of her first child missing, but the second was baptized 18 Jun 1671 at Kingston. Then comes the record of Warner Hornbeek and Grietje Tyssen with 7 children baptized from 1693 to 1708. Either Anna deHooges or Warner Hornbeek died about 1690. The latter seems more probable because otherwise he would have raised two good sized families. It is proable that the second family is by a son-Warner Hornbeek, Junior, who could well have been of age if born about 1670. No Kingston references to Anna are found for 14 years-1688 to 1702, when she witnessed the baptism of her son (?) Warner's child Marritje (No. 1334). The theory is that she married Dirck Quick and lived in New Amsterdam in the intervening period, having her son Theunis 2nd there in 1695, and that after Dirck's death about 1702 she returned to Kingston. Plausibility is added to this theory by the fact that Teunis Quick (a nephew of Dirck) married Claartje deHooges in 1696, a daughter of Johannes (KM 121). The latter theory is advanced by a careful and painstaking genealogist, Mr. James S. Elston, of Hartford, Conn, a descendent of Dirck Quick.
  Dirck Theuniszen Quick in 1698 in Westchester Towne swore allegiance to King William-(NYGB Rec. Jan 1928).
  It seems possible that Dirck's mother, Belitje, grew homesick and made a trip across the ocean to the old country, taking her youngest son, Dirck, then 15 years old, along for company, for on 27 Sept 1663 the passenger list on the sailing vessel DeStetyn, out of Holland (Capt Isaac Gerritsz Schaep), contain these names-Belitje Jacobsz and Dirck Teunissen-(DHNY vol. 3:52-63).
  At a convention in the N.Y. City Hall 4 Sep 1689 Dirck was named as a Justice of the Peace.



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