The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester (1881 revised edition, Vol. I)
The conclusion, therefore, seems irresistible, that Eva and Maria were one and the same person." " It is not certain when Margaret Harden-brook died, though it Avas not in 1662, as strangely stated by some, for this was the year of her marriage with Frederick Philipse. She was alive and a passenger on the ship with our travelers in 1679, but she must have died before 1692, when Frederick Philipse espoused Catharine Van Cortlandt, widow of John Derval and daughter of Oloff Van Cortlandt, for his second wife."*
By his second marriage, Frederick Philipse had no children. By his first wife, Margaret Hardenbrook, he had issue Philip Philipse, baptized March 18, 1664, who pre-deceased his father; Adolphus, baptized Nov. 15th, 1665, Annetge, baptized Nov. 27, 1667, and Rombout, baptized Jan. 9, 1670. The latter probably died in infancy, as his name does not occur in the will of his father.
Frederick Philipse, first lord of the manor of Philipsburgh, died on
a Mem. of Long Island nist., Soc, vol. L, Journal of voyage to New York. 1679-SO. Brooklyn, 1SCT. Frederick Philipse and Margaret, his wife, who was the acknowledged owner and supercargo of the Charles, and was with her daughter, Auuetge, a fellow passenger of our travelers in that ship ou the voyage to New York in 1679-
THE TOWN OF MOUNT PLEASANT.
the 6th of November, 1702, in the 77th year of his age. His wife thus records his death in the family Bible, "Anno 1702, the 6th of November, Sunday night at 10 o'clock, my husband, Frederick Fhilipse died, and lies buried in the church yard in the manor named Philipsburgh"*