The History of the Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, Vol. II (1881 revised ed.)
His coq)s in:u;e free with the cattle of that part of the country, and got the sonbr; '.v.'-/ of " Cow Boys," in revenge for their knowledge in the article of Loef. The colonel finally fixed his residence in Nova Scotia, and in 1-97, was sworn in as a member of the council of that colony. He died at Annapolis, N. S., about the year 1809. Martha Tippett, his widow, also died there in 1827, aged 73, and where his sons are still living. Oliver de Lancey, third son of Peter and Alice, threw up his
De r.aucrv liiK.s, Westcht-.-UT. Ih'j licarl-quarters of Lt. Coi. ,T:mi"a de Laucey. From tne ori;iinal luccure in tne posje.-sion of Dr. Bayard of \\ i??t Farm.=.
commission in the British service at the commencement of the Revolutionary war. His children are resident in the town. Peter, the fourth son, and Lt. Col. Warren de Lancey, besides four daughters."
By an indenture bearing date the 29th of July, 1774, the trustees of Westchester, for clivers considerations, sold to James and Oliver de Lancey, and their heirs and assignees, the ground under the water of Broncks's river, and all such lands as has been granted or appointed by the town, for the use of the mills, etc.'' The present proprietor, Philip M. Lydig, Esq., holds by conveyance from under Oliver de Lancey, Esq. The dwelling-house which once served as the head-quarters of Washington, was destroyed by fire a few years since.
a Fornianyof Thi.- a'M'VL-iJarticulars we are uulebtPil to Mr. Cooper's correspoudjcco in the ll<-iv .hiiirii'i' III isus. 6 Kec. of TruiteLS, pp. c3, S9.