Catherine Op den Dyck

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Catherine Op den Dyck (Smith)

Also Known As: "Katherine Smith"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Thornbury, Gloucestshire, England (United Kingdom)
Death: July 14, 1664 (38-39)
Narragansett, Washington County, Rhode Island, British Colonial America
Place of Burial: Narragassett, Washington, Ri
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Richard Smith, of Wickford, RI and unknown Smith
Wife of Geysbert "Gilbert" Updike
Mother of Elizabeth Wightman; Capt. Lodowick Updike; Capt. Richard Opdyck; Sarah Opdyck; Johannes Opdyck and 3 others
Sister of Richard Smith, of Smith's Castle, RI; Elizabeth Viall; Joan Newton; James Smith; Joan Neuton and 2 others

Managed by: Rachel Leigh Hansen
Last Updated:

About Catherine Op den Dyck

CATHERINE4 SMITH (Richard3, Richard2, William1), daughter of (4) Richard3 and Elizabeth SMITH, was born about 1620 in Exeter, and died between 1654 and 1674[5]. She married in New Amsterdam, on 24 Sept. 1643, (ADA-11) GYSBERT OP DEN DYCK[4, 7], son of (ADA-10) Lodowick and Gertrude (VAN WESEK) OP DEN DYCK, who was christened on 25 Sept. 1605 in St. Willibrod[3, 7], and died after 1664[6]. [1, 7, 9]

Child: See (ADA-11) Gysbert OP DEN DYCK

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Richard Smith's will reads: "In the Name of God, Amen. The fourteenth day of July in the year of Our Lord, one thousand, six hundred, sixty and four, in the Sixteenth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord, Charles the Second by the Grace of God of England and Scotland, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Father, etc. I, Richard Smith, of Wickford, in the Narragansett Countrey, in New England, Yeoman, being in health of Body, and of good and perfect memory, (Thanks be unto God) Do make this my last Will and Testament, and I do hereby revoak and renounce all former and other Wills and Testaments whatsoever heretofore by me made, by Word, Writing or otherwise And make and ordain this to be my very true, last Will and Testament, and no other Concerning my Lands, Chattels, debts, and every part and parcel thereof, in manner and form as followeth. First: I Commend my soul to Almighty God, and to his Son Jesus Christ, my Saviour and Redeemer, by whom I have to obtain full pardon, and remission of all my Sins, and to Inherit Everlasting Life. And I will that my Body be decently buryed by the Discretion of my Executors hereunto named. Item. I will that my debts which I shall owe unto any Person or Persons at the time of my decease either by Law or Conscience be well and truly Contented and paid, within Convenient time, out of my Goods and Chattels.

Item, I will that all my share and part in the Great Neck of Land beyond Capt. Edward Hutchinss house, Westward and Southward and all the rest of my share of Land belonging to that purchase And also my share of Land of the last purchase and all my Cattle, Horses, Mares, Sheep, Goats, & Swine and all my Goods and Debt whatsoever to me appertaining be (after my decease) Divided into Four Equal parts and portions, the which after my debts paid & funeral Charged thereout, I gie and bequeath as followeth. That is to say. To my son Richard Smith, and his heirs, the one fourth part or portion thereof, and to my Daughter, Elisabeth, wife of John Vial and her issue, I give one other Fourth part thereof, and to my Grand Children, the Children of my dec'd daughter Katharine, sometime wife to Gilbert Updike, one other forth part thereof to be Equally Divided amongst them. And to my Grand Children, the Children of my deceased daughter, Joan, sometime wife to Thomas Newton, one other fourth part thereof to be Equally divided amongst them my S'd Grand Children, parts to be paid to each of them, Viz. To Each of my Grandsons as they Come to the age of Twenty one years; And to Each of my Grand Daughters as they Come to the age of Eighteen years, or on day of marriage which shall first happen, And in Case that any One of my Grand Children, the Children of my daughters Katharine and Joan, do Dyue before they come to be of the age aforesaid or Marr'yd, then such part or share, as should have been to such deceased, shall be to the Survivours of them, part and part alike to them to be divided.



A mural tablet in St. Paul's Church in Wickford, erected in 1903 to the memory of Richard Smith, recites the highlights of his eventful career. "he led a sober, honourable and religious life," it reads, and closes with the words of Roger Williams: "In his owne house with much serenitie of soule and comfort ye yielded up his spirit to God (the Father of Spirits) in peace." His will reads:.

In the Name of God, Amen. The fourteenth day of July in the year of Our Lord, one thousand, six hundred, sixty and four, in the Sixteenth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord, Charles the Second by the Grace of God of England and Scotland, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Father, etc. I, Richard Smith, of Wickford, in the Narragansett Countrey, in New England, Yeoman, being in health of Body, and of good and perfect memory, (Thanks be unto God) Do make this my last Will and Testament, and I do hereby revoak and renounce all former and other Wills and Testaments whatsoever heretofore by me made, by Word, Writing or otherwise And make and ordain this to be my very true, last Will and Testament, and no other Concerning my Lands, Chattels, debts, and every part and parcel thereof, in manner and form as followeth. .

First: I Commend my soul to Almighty God, and to his Son Jesus Christ, my Saviour and Redeemer, by whom I have to obtain full pardon, and remission of all my Sins, and to Inherit Everlasting Life. And I will that my Body be decently buryed by the Discretion of my Executors hereunto named. .

Item. I will that my debts which I shall owe unto any Person or Persons at the time of my decease either by Law or Conscience be well and truly Contented and paid, within Convenient time, out of my Goods and Chattels. .

Item, I give unto my Son Richard Smith all my Right, Title and interest of, in and to my Dwelling house, and Lands thereto belonging, Situate, being and lying in Wickford aforesaid, and is bounded on the Southwest by Annoquatucket river, and by the Lands of Capt. William Hudson, Northeasterly and on the East by a fresh river or brook and Creek and Cove. .

Item, I give unto my Son the s'd Richard Smith, all my right title and interest of, in, and to my propriety of Lands lying in Cunnanicot Island and Dutch Island, with the privileges and appurtenances to them or either of them belonging or in any way appertaining. .

Item, I give unto my daughter Elisabeth, wife of John Vial of Boston, Vintner, all that my Share, which is a oe Third part of Land lying on the Southerly side of my son, Richard Smith's two thirds part of a tract of land lying on the Easterly side of the aforesaid fresh river, or Brook, and Creek and Cove, Commonly Called by the name of Sagag. Item, I will that all my share and part in the Great Neck of Land beyond Capt. Edward Hutchinss house, Westward and Southward and all the rest of my share of Land belonging to that purchase And also my share of Land of the last purchase and all my Cattle, Horses, Mares, Sheep, Goats, & Swine and all my Goods and Debt whatsoever to me appertaining be (after my decease) Divided into Four Equal parts and portions, the which after my debts paid & funeral Charged thereout, I give and bequeath as followeth. That is to say. To my son Richard Smith, and his heirs, the one fourth part or portion thereof, and to my Daughter, Elisabeth, wife of John Vial and her issue, I give one other Fourth part thereof, and to my Grand Children, the Children of my dec'd daughter Katharine, sometime wife to Gilbert Updike, one other forth part thereof to be Equally Divided amongst them. And to my Grand Children, the Children of my deceased daughter, Joan, sometime wife to Thomas Newton, one other fourth part thereof to be Equally divided amongst them my S'd Grand Children, parts to be paid to each of them, Viz. To Each of my Grandsons as they Come to the age of Twenty one years; And to Each of my Grand Daughters as they Come to the age of Eighteen years, or on day of marriage which shall first happen, And in Case that any One of my Grand Children, the Children of my daughters Katharine and Joan, do Dyue before they come to be of the age aforesaid or Marr'yd, then such part or share, as should have been to such deceased, shall be to the Survivours of them, part and part alike to them to be divided. .

Item, I make and ordain my sons, Richard Smith, and John Vial, to be my full whole and only Executors of this my last will and Testament. And my Well beloved Friend Capt. Edward Hutchinson of Boston. [Here the document is torn.] Before John Leverett Assistant, Entered and recorded at the request of the s'd Vial the 22d. of August, 1666. Robert Howard, Not. Pub., An attested Copy..


Katharine Smith Updike

Birth

   1622
   Gloucestershire, England

Death

   1660 (aged 37–38) 

Burial

   Burial Details Unknown 

Memorial ID

   165286968 · View Source

Memorial

   Photos 0
   Flowers 8

Note: the birth year given is an approximation based on her marriage date in 1643 and the likely marriage date of her parents in 1621; the death date is a rough approximation based on her having a child born about 1658, but being called deceased in the 1664 will of her father.

Katharine was the daughter of Richard Smith, who ran a trading post at Cocumscussoc, near modern-day Wickford, Rhode Island. Secondary sources give her mother's name as Joan Barton, which is entirely plausible. Her father also had dealings in New Netherland, and it was there that Katharine was married on 23 Sep 1643 to German-born Gysbert op Dyck, whose name has been anglicized to Gilbert Updike. Her husband was an official with the Dutch government of New Netherland, and he worked as both the commissary and commander of the Dutch trading post at Fort Good Hope, where Hartford, Connecticut now stands.

Katharine and Gilbert had seven known children, all likely born in New Netherland, and the first three baptized there. Katharine was called deceased in the 1664 will of her father, and likely died in New Netherland, and was likely buried there. Not long after her father's death in 1666, her husband and many of her children came to Rhode Island, likely to claim their inheritance of her father's lands.

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Catherine Op den Dyck's Timeline

1625
March 31, 1625
Exeter, Washington, Rhode Island, Exeter, RI, United States
March 31, 1625
Or, Exeter, Washington, Rhode Island
1625
Thornbury, Gloucestshire, England (United Kingdom)
1644
July 27, 1644
Kingston, Washington County, United States of America
1646
1646
New Amsterdam, NY
1648
1648
Rhode Island, USA
1650
October 1650
Nieuw Amsterdam, New York, New York County, New York, United States
1658
January 10, 1658
New Amsterdam,NY.
June 10, 1658
New Amsterdam,NY.