The Fulkerson Family Pages
Sarah Dircks, #4 of 9 of Dirck and Christina
Sarah Dircks was born c 1639 in New Amsterdam, New York, in Buswyck, Queens County. Sarah was the fourth of seven sisters and the fourth of the nine children of Dirck Volckertszen De Noorman and Christina Vigne. Note that Amsterdam, New York, is a small town upstate in the vicinity of Schenectady; whereas New Amsterdam was renamed New York after the English Duke of York in 1665. According to a note on Larry Maxwell's family tree, Sarah died 21 Dec. 1659 at about the age of 21. We've found no record of her ever having married.
Minister Everardus Bogardus served the Reformed Dutch Church of New Amsterdam from 1633 to 1647. It is likely Bogardus baptized all the children of Dirck and Christina except the last two.In 1647 Bogardus left New Amsterdam for Europe aboard The Princess, but, along with the ship and all its passengers, was lost at sea in the Bristol Channel.
Wilhelm Kieft would have been the Dutch Director-General in charge at the time of Sarah's birth. Kieft served as the sixth Dutch Director-General of the colony of New Netherland from 1597 to 1647. Kieft became infamous for his attacks on the Raritan/Lenape tribes and the subsequent deterioration in relations between colonists and Native Americans that nearly resulted in the destruction of New Netherlands (see Kieft's War). With Bogardus, Kieft perished aboard The Princess, but, along with the ship and all its passengers, was lost at sea in the Bristol Channel, off the coast of Swansea, Wales, enroute to Amsterdam to defend himself against charges stemming from his attacks. Rev. Bogardus, who perished with him on the Princess, was to have testified against him.
This portrait, of Isabella Coymans handing a rose to her husband Stephanus Geraerdts. The couple were married in 1644, she the daughter of a wealthy Haarlem cloth merchant. Her clothing and appearance may have been similar to a woman who lived in the era of our ancestor. No doubt, as a woman of means, Isabella's wardrobe was likely much more sophisticated than that of a child grown up on the frontier in the New World of the Dutch colony in New York.