Mary McCall

The New Netherland Ancestors of

MARY McCALL,

the wife of LAMBERT CADWALADER



- for Lambert Cadwalader

Continental Congress Delegate, High Ranking Military during the American Revolution (Colonel), House of Representatives





       __Archibald McCall1,7
      |
MARY McCALL7
the wife of LAMBERT CADWALADER
      |
      |     __Peter Kemble1,2
      |    |
      |__Judith Kemble1
	   |
	   |               __Samuel Bayard2
	   |              |
	   |          __Nicholas Bayard1,2
	   |         |    |
	   |         |    |__Anna Stuyvesant1,2
	   |         |
	   |     __Samuel Bayard1,2,3
	   |    |    |
	   |    |    |     __Casper Varleth2
	   |    |    |    |
	   |    |    |__Judith Varleth2
	   |    |         |
	   |    |         |__Judith (__)2
	   |    |
	   |__Geertruyd Bayard1,2
		|
		|          __Olof Stephenszen Van Cortlandt3,6
		|         |
		|     __Stephanus Van Cortlandt3,3,6
		|    |    |
		|    |    |     __Jan Loockermans
		|    |    |    |
		|    |    |__Anna Loockermans3,6
		|    |         |
		|    |         |__(__)
		|    |
		|__Margaret Van Cortlandt1,2,3
		     |
		     |          __Pieter Tjercks2
		     |         |
		     |     __Philip Pieterse Schuyler3
		     |    |    |
		     |    |    |__Geertruyt Philips van Schuylder2
		     |    |
		     |__Geertruy Schuyler2,3,6
			  |
			  |     __Brant Arentszen Van Slichtenhorst3
			  |    |
			  |__Margaretta Van Slichtenhorst3
			       |
			       |__Aeltje Van Wenckum3


Look at the code for this diagram.
(warning: this opens a new window)


Biography of LAMBERT CADWALADER

 
Lambert Cadwalader was born in 1742 near Trenton, NJ. He attended Dr. Allison's Academy, and the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1760. He was a member of the common council of Philadelphia at the beginning of the Revolution, and signed the Non-Importation Agreement in 1765. In 1775 he was elected as a delegate to the provincial convention in Pennsylvania, and in 1776 to the State constitutional convention. During the Revolutionary Army he commanded a regiment of "The Greens", was a lieutenant colonel of the Third Pennsylvania Battalion in 1776, and became a colonel of the Fourth Pennsylvania Line. He was taken a prisoner at Fort Washington on the Hudson and after his release resigned from the Army. He was a member of the Continental Congress in 1785, 1786 and 1787, and was elected to the First Congress (4 March 1789 - 3 March 1791) and to the Third Congress (4 March 1793 - 3 March 1795). He died on his estate, "Greenwood," near Trenton, NJ., 13 September 1823, with interment in the Friends Burying Ground, Trenton, NJ.
 

 


Notes and Sources


   1.  Collections of the New York Historical Society for the Year 1884.  New
       York:  privately published, 1885.  vii-xxiii.
   2.  Purple, Edwin R. "Contributions to the History of the Ancient Families
       of New York.  Varleth-Varlet-Varleet-Verlet-Verleth"  The New York
       Genealogical and Biographical Record, 9 (1878):  54-62, 113-125,
       153-160; 10 (1879):  35-38.
   3.  Florence Christoph, Schuyler Genealogy, A Compendium of Sources Pertaining
       to the Schuyler Families in America Prior to 1800. Vol. I.  The
       Friends of the Schuyler Mansion, 1987.  9-10.
   4.  Ibid., p. 3-6.
   5.  Ibid., p. 2.
   6.  Purple, Edwin R. "Contributions to the History of the Ancient Families
       of New York - Loockermans."  The New York Genealogical and Biographical
       Record 7 (1877):  11-16.


 

First uploaded 11 October 2001

Last Modified  Saturday, 08-Sep-2018 18:03:15 MDT

Home Page

Person Index

List of Notables

Updates

Contact me
(John Camp)