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- Bef 1647
Generation: 1
1. | Jans (John) William Woertman (Workman) died before 1647 in Amsterdam, Holland. Notes:
Original Source: Workman Family History -this seciton researched by Lydia W. Billings
John WIlliam Workman (the Dutch form of his name being Jans William Woertman) died in Amsterdam, Holland, some time before the year 1647. Little is known of him except that he was married and had a family. It is believed that he was an
emigrant from England, comming to Holland as a result of religious persecution during the time of the Puritan upheavals. In Holland, John seemingly integrated into the social and religious way of life of the people there and his family adopted
their customs so completely so that during the time of their emigrations, they were known mainly as sons, daughters, of wife of John. In church records the patronymic pattern was followed almost completely so that John's son, Richard, is
recorded as Dirck Jansen very frequently. As early as the year 1628, Jans WIlliam Woertman had married Harmtje (Hannah, an unusual name among the Dutch) and they were the parents of at least three children born in Amsterdam, Holland.
Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Jans married Harmtje (Hannah) in 1628. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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Generation: 2
4. | Dirck (Derick, Richard) Jans (John) Woertman (1.Jans1) was born about 1630 in Amsterdam, Holland. Notes:
Source: WORKMAN FAMILY HISTORY
Thelma C. Anderson
Salt Lake City, Utah 1962
Dirck Jans Woertman, son of John WIlliam Workman, born about 1630 Amsterdam, Holland; imigrated to America in 1647 (the date fixed in 1687 when he took the oath of allegiance at Brooklyn and stated that he had been in the country 40
years). Although known during this period simply as Dirck (Derick) Jans, in 1680 he resumed the surname of Woertman and was known by it from rhen on. Just where he lived from 1647 to 1661 is not certain, but on 10 April 1661 he and his wife
MARRIETJE TEUNIS DENYSE ... were admitted to the Brooklyn Dutch Church. Just when the couple was married is not known, but it was probably in 1660. At this time and subsequently Dirck(Derick) owned property in Brooklyn and operated the
Brooklyn Ferry. The sale of this property took place in 1687. Dirck was made a town officer in 1673 in Brooklyn.
Dirck married Marretje TEUNIS DENYSE about 1660. Marretje (daughter of Teunise (Cornelius) NYSSEN (DENYS) and Femmetje (Phoebe) Seals) was born in 1644; died in 1690. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Dirck married Annetje AUKES about 1691. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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Generation: 3
5. | Jan Derick (Derikson) Wortman, Woertman,Workman (4.Dirck2, 1.Jans1) Notes:
Original Source: Workman Family History - Researched by Mrs. Lydia W. Billings.
"Among the early settlers of this beautiful valley (Raritan, Sommerset County, NJ) was Jan Derick Woertman (Wortman) who, with his family, came from Brooklyn Heights, New York in the year 1699, his daughter Elizabeth being christened in
Sommerville in September of that year. By the year of 1704 he removed to the village of Raritan where he remained for a number of years, moving from there with grown children to Pluckemin. Here he erected a long old-fashioned house made of
logs that was to be known for many years as the Workman Homestead. Here a descendant, Jan Wortman, known as Squire Wortman (no doubt because of his vast estate of 500 acres) entertained the patriots, Guisbert Sutphen (see Catherine Wortman),
Aaron Merick, and Colonel Stephen Huntwhen they met to plan their resietance to the British army a year before the Declaration of Independence was signed. It was here too that Jan Wortman, trained by his father in the family trade as a
blacksmith, shod the horses of George Washington and his entourage during the Revolutionary War. Some nights John and his helpers worked all through the night repairing the carriages and shoeing the horses so they would be ready for the
General the next morning.
The Woertman tradition in America had been one of civic loyalty. Derick Jans had begun it in 1673 when he became an officer of his town in Brooklyn. Jan Derick continued it as Justice of the Peace in New Jersey: Squire Jan Wortman, his
nephews and sons plannes and worked for the revolutionary forces and from Somerset County Peter and Andrew Wortman joined the Militia.
Jan married Anna Marie Andries (Andriessin) on 17 Jan 1690 in Brooklyn, NY. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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Generation: 4
21. | Jan Evertsen Bout WORTMAN (5.Jan3, 4.Dirck2, 1.Jans1) was born in 1695 in Brooklyn, NY. Family/Spouse: Nellitje. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 28. Wilhemus (William) Wortman was born on 17 Nov 1721 in Somerville, Somerset, NJ.
- 29. Maria Wortman was born on 9 Feb 1724 in Somerville, Somerset, NJ.
- 30. Sarah Wortman was born on 5 Feb 1727 in Somerville, Somerset, NJ.
- 31. Jan Wortman was born on 1 Feb 1729 in Somerville, Somerset, NJ; died on 25 Aug 1807; was buried in Bedminster.
- 32. Catherine Wortman was born about 1730 in Somerville, Somerset, NJ.
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Family/Spouse: Belitie (Belitje). Belitie died in 1720. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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