http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/14223942/family?cfpid=78555394
Rev War? John Doughty? possible additional son Bartholomew ?
http://www.royalprovincial.com/military/rhist/njv/njvofficers.htm
who drowned on a transport ship in Oct 1783
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/14223942/family?cfpid=78555394
Rev War? John Doughty? possible additional son Bartholomew ?
http://www.royalprovincial.com/military/rhist/njv/njvofficers.htm
who drowned on a transport ship in Oct 1783
Mother
Sarah Mary w John • Doughty
1720–
Children..
Jeremiah ‘Doty’ Doughty 1740–1816
Catherine ‘Doty’ Doughty 1754–1819
John ‘Doty’ Doughty 1756–1819
Peter Henry ‘Doty’ Doughty 1758–1809
Cornelius ‘Doty’ Doughty 1765–
Sarah ‘Doty’ Doughty
Maria ‘Doty’ Doughty
Elizabeh ‘Doty’ Doughty
Jane ‘Doty’ Doughty
Margaret ‘Doty’ Doughty
Captain Bartholomew Doughty was in Delancey's 3rd Battalion. The van B(e)urens were closely aligned with Delancey both in occupied NYC during the war and in Clements NS (land grants)
I have a hope to find Bartholomew and Charles as descendants of:
Isaac Doty
1649–1728
BIRTH 08 FEB 1649 • Plymouth, Massachusetts
DEATH 1728 • Oyster Bay, New York
http://person.ancestry.com/tree/35596497/person/18833735231/facts
He married:
Elizabeth England
1655–
BIRTH 1655
DEATH Unknown
and seems to have had many sons:
1)Joseph Doty 1680–
2)Samuel Doty 1695–1740
3)Isaac Doughty
4)Jacob Doughty
5)James Doughty
6)Solomon Doughty
https://familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/24777532
Look under:
3. CORNET ELIAS DOUGHTY (1632-1690)
SARAH FRANCIS WHITEHEAD (1636-1725)
they had as children:
Children of Elias Doughty and Sarah Francis Whitehead:
1.Mary Doughty, b. about 1658; md. at Flushing 6 July 1676/77, Thomas Hick; d. 1713.
2.Francis Doughty, b. about 1661; md. Mary Palmer in 1686. In 1685 Francis was a Cornet in Captain Willet’s Troup of horses. He was noted for having swum from Flushing to New York City. He died 21 December 1741 at about 79 years old. (11 children)
3.Elias Doughty, b. abt. 1664; md. 5 June 1718, at Flushing, Elizabeth Hinchman or Elizabeth Eastman; d. at Flushing 1 Dec 1743-45. (8 children)
4.Charles Doughty, b. about 1667; md. at Flushing, about 1690, Elizabeth Jackson; d.1735.
5.Jacob Doughty was born 14 February 1672, in Flushing, Queens, New York, to Elias Doughty (1635-1690) and Sarah Francis Whitehead (1636-1725.) He married Amy Whitehead probably at Jamaica, Queens, New York, about 1695. He and his wife were Quakers who lived at Cow Neck, Long Island, New York. In 1713 they moved to Bethlehem, Hunterdon County, New Jersey. He died 11 August 1737, Bethlehem, Hunterdon, New Jersey.
6.Benjamin Doughty, b. abt. 1674 at Flushing; md. Hannah Thorne, 1705, and died the year he was married 1705.
7.William Doughty, b. at Flushing abt. 1676; md. at Flushing Phebe Taylor about 1709. Justice of the Peace at Jamaica, L.I. from 1719-1723.
8.Sarah Doughty, b. at Flushing abt. 1680. (Didn’t marry John Embree. John Embree married Charity Doughty.)
(Source: “The Doughty Family of Long Island,” by Ethan Allen Doty, in the New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 43, page 273, which assembles and corrects many previous genealogies of the Doughty family.)
https://books.google.com/books?id=jtYUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA273&lpg...
“The Doughty Family of Long Island,” by Ethan Allen Doty
in:
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Volume 43
edited by Richard Henry Greene, Henry Reed Stiles, Melatiah Everett Dwight, George Austin Morrison, Hopper Striker Mott, John Reynolds Totten, Harold Minot Pitman, Louis Effingham De Forest, Charles Andrew Ditmas, Conklin Mann, Arthur S. Maynard
This genealogy looks to have some promising leads as there are Loyalists surnames mingled in the tree. It is, however, incomplete. There is said to be a sequel but it is not on this url.
http://newyorkfamilyhistory.org/sites/nyab/files/files/Master%20Ind...
an index of lots of Doughty family in the The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record
KING'S (NOW COLUMBIA) COLLEGE, AND ITS EARLIEST
ALUMNI.
By Richard H. Greene.
(Continued from Vol. XXV., p. 181.)
I768.
Charles Doughty was surgeon of the Third Battalion Loyal British
Volunteers, commanded by Colonel de Lancey. I do not know if he was
related to John Doughty (class of 1770), or if either was connected with
the John who was prominent in Brooklyn, N. Y. (1785-1829), or the
Rev. Francis Doughty, from Taunton, Mass., to Maspeth, L. I., where
he was patentee, and father-in-law of Adrian Van der Donck.
We may at least conclude that the graduate, as a loyalist, in the service
of the king, retired with the army at the end of the struggle, and there-
after ceased to be identified with this state and nation.
https://thegenealogist.wordpress.com/2010/03/31/loyalist-samuel-dot...
"Samuel Doty was a Loyalist. He joined the British forces as a volunteer in the 17th Dragoons and served as quartermaster. He was captured by the Rebels and became a prisoner of war, released, and then became injured in battle. At the end of the Revolution he left America as a Loyalist and settled in Nova Scotia."
...
Samuel married Hepzibeth Porter and in 1791 they had a daughter that they named Hepzibeth Doty. Her son was William Riley Barr
... This does not look like a direct match
http://www.uelac.org/Loyalist-Info/extras/Moody-James/MOODY-James-a...
MUSTER ROLL AT GULLIVER’S HOLE, ST. MARY’S BAY AND SISSIBOO, 1 AND 6 , JUNE, 1784
mentions 2 Samuel Doughty mariners (both w/o family)
William Doughty in Shelburne County 1786
https://novascotia.ca/archives/census/returnsMG1v957.asp?ID=500
leads me to wonder
if Anne was a sister or a daughter.
There is another Samuel Doughty who married Mary Doughty
Check those profiles for other notes... It seems that the Samuel Doughty Mary Brown match may be the Loyalist refugee who went to Nova Scotia and may have then returned to NY to baptize their child Gertrude in 1800:
1800 May 22; Samuel Doughty, Mary Brown; Geertrude (b 6/14/95);
It is interesting that just a couple days before, Dr. Beekman van Beuren baptized a child possible in the very same church.
To me this suggests that Anne Doughty, wife of Sylvester (they married in NS) may well be Samuel's sister... (!)
Doughty tree on ancestry: http://person.ancestry.com/tree/39459465/person/19373573363/facts
Edward Doughty IV 1750–
Sarah Doughty 1752–
Samuel Doughty 1756–1822
Mary Doughty 1758–
(these are siblings born to Edward and Millicent (Somers). Is there 'room' for an Anne too? ~• the future wife of Sylvester van B(e)uren??
http://person.ancestry.com/tree/45068803/person/6301618898/facts
Look that this (wrong) Ann Doughty had a sister who married a Heaton (according to the same tree). Coincidence: Sylvester van Beuren also had a sister Mary who married a Heaton..
I think that if the ancestry dot com tree were better developed we'd see which (close-by) Doughty is the father of Ann Doughty
https://www.geni.com/photo/view/6000000019182195571?photo_id=600000...
Shows some Doughty men of Long Island who may be closely related to Anne. A url reference:
Samuel Doughty
Captain Bartholomew Doughty
Samuel Doughty, Jr.
Dr. Charles Doughty, Loyalist
all three are still worth consideration
repeating:
<begin>
The Charles Doughty of class of 1768 was probably a descendant of Rev. Francis Doughty, of Maspeth, Long Island, whose son, Elias, lived at Flushing, Long Island, and was the ancestor of the Long Island Doughty family. There were many Charles Doughtys in that family, but it is impossible to say with certainty which one it was that graduated from King's College, 1768." ~• according to: http://archive.org/stream/newyorkgenealog26newy/newyorkgenealog26ne...
~• elsewhere in the same text:
KING'S (NOW COLUMBIA) COLLEGE, AND ITS EARLIEST ALUMNI. By Richard H. Greene. (Continued from Vol. XXV., p. 181.) 1768.
Charles Doughty was surgeon of the Third Battalion Loyal British Volunteers, commanded by Colonel de Lancey.
We may at least conclude that the graduate, as a loyalist, in the service of the king, retired with the army at the end of the struggle, and thereafter ceased to be identified with this state and nation. <end>
1768 graduation implies a birth date of....????
also on our screen should be JOHN DOUGHTY who also graduated King's College near the time of Charles:
If Charles, who graduated 1768, was a relative, the loyalty of one
would cause us to expect it in the other. We also look for King's College
graduates in the English Church, and I find a John Doughty, (oftener) Doty,
officiating in the capacity of lay reader in the summer of 1770 in St. Peter's
Church, Cortlandt, N. Y. This man was a son of Joseph, a merchant in
New York, where the son was born in 1750, four years before the man whose honors are assigned to him by the catalogue. This man was ordained in England for the church at Peekskill, N. Y., but was soon transferred to Schenectady ; he was a loyalist.
The parish of St. Peter's, Peekskill, was organized August 10, 1770.
Beverly Robinson (King's, 1773), or his father, and Susanna Phillipse, the wife of Doty's friend Beverly Robinson, were the principal benefactors.
Doty became rector July 16, 1 77 1 ; his successor was Rev. Bernard Page. He resigned in 1773, and, as was stated above, went to Schenectady, where he remained until 1777, when he obtained liberty to go to Canada, though he was forced to sell his furniture to procure the means for the journey. While here he had been twice arrested, and his services had been intermitted on account of his loyalty, and after reaching Canada
he was chaplain to his Majesty's Royal Regiment at Montreal. In October, 1781, he went to England, but returned to Canada June 12, 1784, where he continued till 1793, when he resigned to go to St. Ann's Church, Brooklyn, L. I. In 1795, however, we find him again at Sorel, Canada, but he resigned in 1803.