Posts Tagged hyde park


HYDE PARK ON THE HUDSON

31 January 2012
Bill Murray as FDR

Bill Murray as FDR

An Internet search about a movie with Bill Murray as Franklin Roosevelt reveals a large number of hits. It seems that the movie is planned to be shot this fall in Hyde Park.

Laura Linney

Laura Linney will play Daisy

The story covers one weekend in Hyde Park during a visit from the Queen and King of England and covers FDR’s rumored romantic relationship with his distant cousin, Margaret Suckley (Daisy). Daisy gifted the president with Fala, a Scottish Terrier. Fala outlived Roosevelt by seven years and is buried with him.

In 2007 we held the STFA annual meeting and dinner at the Suckley Mansion, also known as Wilderstein. The movie may be an HBO film rather than a studio movie. Keep your eye out for this one!

~~Patricia Fox


Jacobus Stoutenburgh Mural

31 August 2011
Jacobus Stoutenburg clearing land. (Mural from Post Office in Hyde Park)

We just wanted to share one of the murals from the Hyde Park, New York Post Office. This and other illustrations like it are available for viewing on our Illustrations page.

  • Description: Before 1741. Jacobus Stoutenburgh, his sons, and slaves clear the land. His log cabin, built in 1723, was the first house in Hyde Park Village. The Kings Highway, then a grassy "waggon" road, passed in front. Jacobus and his wife Margaret Teller had eight children who varied in age in 1741 from 23 year old Tobias to 5 year old Luke.
  • Artist: Olin Dows, of Rhinebeck, NY, was a neighbor and family friend of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
  • Location: Hyde Park, NY

A Romance of Dutchess County, New York

26 June 2011

Here’s a surprising bit of family history I happened to stumble across while researching Margaret Teller. It concerns another relative named Rebecca Watson who married Dr. Abraham Stoutenburg in 1784 and then later took their son and left the man. I was incredibly surprised by the openly judgmental attitude of the author of this piece. It’s one thing to know intellectually that women used to be viewed and treated differently than now, but quite another to have it expressed so blatantly in a published magazine. The statement that her leaving him was a “rash act” is a ludicrous assumption to make when the author admits that “all who knew the circumstances have long since passed away.”

A ROMANCE OF DUTCHESS COUNTY, NEW YORK

THE “OLD NORTHWEST” GENEALOGICAL QUARTERLY
April–July–October, 1910

Old Northwest Genealogical Quarterly, Volume XIIION October 17th, 1784, Rebecca Watson and Dr. Abraham Stoutenburg were married in a little Baptist Church at Bangal, Dutchess County, N.Y. It is believed that the bride came from Maine or Vermont, but the exact locality is not known.

The groom was the son of Col. Tobias Stoutenburg, of Hyde Park and New York City, and of Catharine Van Vleck, daughter of Abram Van Vleck. He was the grandson of Judge Jacobus Stoutenburg, of New York City, Philipsburg Manor and Stoutenburg (Hyde Park), his wife being Margaret Teller, of Teller’s Point, the daughter of William Teller and her grandmother was Sarah Radoff, the official interpreter of the Algonquin Indians.

The father of Judge Jacobus was Pieter Van Stoutenburg, gentleman of New Amsterdam, born in Holland in 1618. Pieter was the rich treasurer of the colony and was one of the prominent burgesses of New Amsterdam.

Thus we see that the bride entered a prominent family and was no doubt envied by the fair maidens of Hyde Park, where she went to reside with her distinguished husband. A son was born to this couple and was named Abram for his distinguished father.

Some months later when the physician was away from home attending to his practice, Rebecca Watson Stoutenburg disappeared from her home taking with her the infant son, and rumor said that she was jealous of one of the doctor’s fair patients. Search was made for the missing ones without avail, and a few years later the physician married again, supposing his first wife dead.

Years passed and Rebecca Watson also married again, as her husband, Abram Stoutenburg died in 1794. Her second husband was a Chitister and of his parentage nothing is known. Within a few years he died and when we hear of Rebecca Watson again she is known as the "Widow Chitister" and lived with her son, Abram Stoutenburg and his wife, Mary Mitchell, near Schuyler’s Lake, N.Y.

Many children came to call her grandmother and to them she told of their prominent ancestors and that their father should be a wealthy man instead of a poor carpenter, never seeming to blame herself for the trouble that had come to the family.

In 1834, Abram Stoutenburg died and was buried at Havana, N. Y., and Rebecca disappeared again. Her grandchildren were small and they only knew it was supposed she returned to her girlhood home. She took with her the family Bible which contained very valuable records both in Dutch and English. Where she died and was buried not one of her descendants knows.

Search has been made for the lost Bible without avail.

A large reward would be given for its recovery could it be found. Some old papers published at the time Rebecca Watson’s leaving Hyde Park may contain a key to unlock the mystery surrounding this romance, but if so it is hidden away where no one will see it and all who knew the circumstances have long since passed away. Yet the consequences of the rash act of one woman has clouded the lives of more than fifty of her descendants.


Reformed Church in Hyde Park

30 November 2010
Stoutenburgh Memorial Windows (Reformed Church, Hyde Park, NY)

Rich History Captured in Glass

The Reformed Church in Hyde Park, New York is located at 4408 Albany Post Road, Hyde Park, NY 12538-1560. The telephone number is (845) 229-7167. It has been known as The Stoutenburgh Religious Society. This is referenced on the note for Panel 15 of the murals in the Hyde Park Post Office.


New Key Map to Cemetery Plot

30 July 2010
Stoutenburgh sign for cemetery

New Cemetery Index Compiled and Created by Tony and Shirley Walker

Thank you to Tony and Shirley Walker for their wonderful work.