This is one of the original sources I had back in the 1980s on my Van Horn family in Louisiana. These books back in the day were known as vanity history books and the writeups were written and submitted for publication by the families themselves. In essence, it was their version of their family history. This fine source but as I have discovered has one major flaw and some inaccuracies. I will have more to say about that in a later post.
Welcome to Larry's Family History Blog. This site is devoted to the genealogy research I'm currently conducting on my ancestral and related family lines. As new information and photos are discovered on my familes, I will post it here. This blog is run by Larry Van Horn and you can reach me at familyhistorian at frontier.com. Do not reuse any info or photos posted here in any format without proper attribution. Copyright 2006-2015 by Family Roots and Branches, a division of Teak Publishing.
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- Biographical Information on Our Immigrant - Christ...
Wednesday, February 8, 2023
Sunday, February 5, 2023
European Origin of Christiaen Barents Van Hoorn, Immigrant
For many years, the Van Horn family legend for those who descended from Christiaen Barents Van Hoorn was our family "originated in Hoorn, Holland." That is exactly what it was - a legend - a myth! Here is where we really are from.
From The American Genealogist, V47, pages 173-175
BEWARE of old or inherited Van Horn/Van Horne pedigrees
Researching early Van Horn families in Colonial America is a nightmare. There I said it and VH researchers really need to be aware that the early family genealogies were junk. But don't take my word for this. FTDNA Van Horn Y-DNA administrator Marleen Van Horne wrote about this on the Ancestry Van Horn Message Board in 2005:
"Pedigrees published on the Van Horn/Van Horne surname prior the 1958 are highly inaccurate. If you are a descendant of Cornelius Van Horne born 1695 in Brooklyn, or his brother, Abraham born 1698, Brooklyn, you will find two different sets of parents listed for these men, in pedigrees published on the web. "Sometimes, a date of 1706 is given for Cornelius birth. The brothers mentioned above are NOT the sons of Abraham Van Horne and Maria Provoost. Abraham and Maria had a son, Cornelius, in 1706, and two sons named, Abraham, in 1713 and 1719 ( years maybe off). All three of these children died young. "The correct parents for Cornelius and Abraham are Matthys Cornelissen and Fytie Adam Brouwer. Matthys was a Dane from Jutland and Fytie of German and Flemish origins. "The two best sources on the descendants of Matthys Cornelissen are Our Van Horne Kindred by Elsie O. Hallenbeck, 1958 and an article, The 1722 Conveyance, in the April, 1976, issue of De Halve Maen, by Paul E. Van Horn. Kindred is not perfect, but it is far better than any Van Horn/Van Horne genealogy prior to this date, and goes a long way to correcting the record."
"I just cannot see their point. I would rather have the right ancestor, no matter what warts they may have.
"If I were you, I would research this line as if you had no idea where it was going. In 1929, Marvin F. Van Horn published The Van Horn Family History. It was a compilation of all the preceding Van Horne genealogies, plus the pedigrees and family group sheet compiled in an effort to get a piece of the estate of one Abraham Van Horn who died intestate. Abraham was a descendant of Jan Cornelissen, so almost every pedigree in that book goes back to old JC. Matthys Cornelissen who happens to be my Van Horne ancestor is not even mentioned, and his sons are attached to another family.
"Every Van Horne genealogy up to 1958 was based on the faulty pedigrees published up to that date. Elsie's book is not without flaws, but it goes a long way to correct all of the errors made up to that time. For example, Elsie spends some time going over Matthys Dutch origins.
"WRONG, Matthys was from Jutland in Denmark, according to
his marriage record. How did Elsie make
that mistake? I can only speculate, but
she must not have seen the original church records. She must have used the Holland Society
transcriptions from the 1890s, which left out the place of origin.
"Enough of this, you are duly warned."
So that is where we are at this point. I will be publishing some material that I can trust here on the blog as I can put it together. It is time to start straightening the Van Horn family genealogy once and for all.
Cousin Larry Van Horn