My maiden name is
McKiel. It's history is a little more complicated than most of the surnames in my family.
The line can be traced back to Sebastian
Van Kortrijk whose family was from the Flemish town of Kortrijk on the Lys. He and his family were refuges of the religious upheavals in Europe and in the early 1600s, he left that area and moved to Holland. He took up residence in Leerdam.
There were seventeen provinces in the Netherlands and these contained the present countries of Holland and Belgium. That whole country had been made part of France during the rule of Charlemagne (767-814), but in the fifteenth century it came under Spanish rule. Charles V. became king of Spain in 1516, and finding many adherents to Martin Luther's reformed faith, he became determined to crush out Protestantism. Thus became a time of great religious persecution in the Netherlands. Under Philip, who succeeded his father, Charles in 1555, things became even worse. By the early 1600s, Holland had became an asylum for the persecuted of many lands.
Two sons were born to Sebastian during his time in Leerdam, Jan and
Michiel. Family names were the exception among the early Dutch ancestors. Most often the father's first was affixed with sen (meaning son) and used as a surname. So the two became known as Jan and Michiel Bastiensen Van Kortryk.
Michiel, my ancester married and settled at Schoonrewoed, a village about two miles north of Leerdam, in South Holland. There he had four children,
Reyer, born in 1653, Metje in 1655, Annetje in 1658 and Bastien in 1662. Another daughter, Alfjie, was born shortly after the family arrived in the New Amsterdam. Meanwhile, Jan had also married had had four children.
With the development of the West India Company, whose main purpose was the expand trade and colonization of America, the Dutch people began to emigrate. The new world promised so much in material gain and religious freedom.
On 16 April 16 1663,
Michiel and his brother Jan departed for New Amsterdam, in present day New York, on the "Spotted Cow". Each brought their wife and four children. The Bastiensens came as free men not indebted to the Dutch West India Company for their passage.
Reyer Michielsen/Michelsen was born in 1653 in Leerdam, Holland. He married
Jacomia Tiebout on 15 April 1686 in the Dutch Reformed Church of New York.
Reyer and Jacomia had eight children, Michiel,
Hendrick, Sarah, Tunis, Ryer, Hannah, Mary and Jane. Some of these children followed the Dutch custom and took their father's name with sen attached and became known as Reyersen or Ryerson. Two continued their father's surname and became Michielsen or Michiels.
Reyer died in 1733 in Fordham, in what is now New York.
Hendrick Michelsen, my ancestor, was born about 1705 at Fordham Manor in New York. He married Jane and had three sons,
John, Hendrick and Michael. He probably lived his entire life there.
John MeKeel was born about 1730. He married
Martha Haight about 1749. He was a member of the Westchester County Militia. Joseph and Martha had four children -
Joseph, Mary, Nathaniel and John McKeel.
Joseph MeKeel/McKeel was born about 1750. He was a Loyalist during the Revolutionary War, fighting on the side of the English. When the war was over he and his family fled to New Brunswick, Canada. On November 1, 1785 he was granted 200 acres at Long Reach, King's County, New Brunswick, for service to England during the war. He married
Anna Burtis and had 6 children,
Joseph, John, Isaac, Sarah, James and Mary McKeel.
Joseph McKeel was born about 1800 in New Brunswick, Canada. He married
Ann Margaret Lounder on 15 October 1823 in Greenwich, New Brunswick, Canada. They had 7 children, James, Eleanor, Mary, John, Joseph, Sarah and
Eliza McKeel.
Eliza Eva McKeel was born on 3 October 1839 and, according to the records of the Greenwich and Westfield Anglican Church, was baptized on 16 March 1840. Eliza had two children born out of wedlock, Melvin and
George Byron McKiel, before marrying Jacob VanWart and having 5 more children. Eliza and Jacob's children were Miles, Mahala, Rosie May, Joseph and Frederick VanWart. Eliza died on 6 August 1916 in New Brunswick, Canada.
George Bryon and his brother Melvin
George Byron McKiel was born 31 March 1868 in New Brunswick, Canada. He went by the name of Byron. He married
Sarah Jemima Craft on 3 November 1892 in Belyea's Cove, Queens, New Brunswick, Canada. The wedding was noted in the St. John's "Messenger and Visitor". Sarah was known as Sadie. They had 6 children, Alice Maude, Robert Craft, Olive May, Gracie Irene,
Harry Redvers and Charles Loran McKiel.
Bryon died on 23 November 1925.
Harry Redvers McKiel was born 30 July 1900 in New Brunswick, Canada. He married
Elise Marie Robinson on 29 October 1924 in St. John's Parish, St. John's, New Brunswick, Canada.
Harry and Elsie moved from Canada to Albion, Maine. They bought a farm there from Fred Hussey who had married Harry's sister Olive May. There they had a dairy and potato farm. They had five children, four girls and my father.
My dad and his father Harry McKiel
Love forever to all my McKiel ancestors!