2. | Richard Stout, (Immigrant) was born in 1615 in Burton Joyce, Nottinghamshire, England; died in 1705 in Middletown, Monmouth Co, New Jersey. Other Events and Attributes:
- Residence: 1648, Monmouth, New Jersey
- Residence: Sept 1655, Gravesend, New York
- Residence: 1665, Monmouth Co, New Jersey
- Will: 23 Oct 1705, Perth Amboy Co, New Jersey; proved
Notes:
Richard Stout landed in New Amsterdam, (New York) about 1640; one of several to "found" Gravesend, Long Island, in Oct. 1643; following his marriage, they made their home there until their removal to Monmouth County, New Jersey, and with others founded the present town of Middletown, and there they lived, died and are buried.
For discription of sons and daughters see Allied Families of Corbin, Stout, Ownby, Walker by Emma Burke Conklin. pp 23-25 (eight children)
Richard Stout was a soldier under Governor Kieft in an Indian uprising; accompanied Lady Moody, with other settlers, to "found" Gravesend, Long Island. He received plantation #16 and grew tobacco, which he sold for 210 guilders, according to town records. He acquired eventually 780 acres, was frequently elected to fill responsible positions in the conduct of the town's public business.
According to The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. I; Virkus, Fredrick A.: Richard Stout b. 1604, d. 1703. Vol. III: Richard Stout was one of ten patentees of Monmouth Co., NJ.
parents: John Stout and Elizabeth Bee, married Nov 13, 1609 in Nottinghamshire. Richard only known child.
Stout family said to be of Viking origin.
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The Stouts were one of the founding families of Monmouth County. Richard Stout (c 1615 - c1705) was one of the signers of the Monmouth Patent in 1664, which certified that the area had been purchased from the local Indians and guaranted religious toleration. Richard's wife, Penelope Kent Van Prince (1622-1732), earned her own fame as a result of her shipwreck on the Jersey shore, the death of her first husband at the hands of an Indian raiding party, her own scalping, kidnapping, and eventual sale to Europeans in New Amsterdam. She and Stout married about 1644. It was her connection to the East Jersey Indians that facilitated the negotiations leading to the Monmouth land purchase and the establishment of Middleton in the mid 1660s. In 1668 the Stouts helped organize the first Baptist Church in New Jersey. Richard Stout eventually became the lartest landowner in the Monmouth County and his seven sons, three daughters and their descendants remained among its leading citizens for several generations.
"Reconstructing William Allen 1711-1799
including a social history of the Scots-Irish"
by Douglas Allen c2010
Warford and Stout Families
pg 165
https://books.google.com/books?id=X59BAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA166&lpg=PA166&dq=james+hyde+elizabeth+stout&source=bl&ots=jQNNvezCDH&sig=-ppGMyc6tZvEyvQasEawX1HGjeY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CDsQ6AEwBWoVChMIpeS_4vmcyAIVzZuICh1ANQ2n#v=onepage&q=james%20hyde%20elizabeth%20stout&f=true
Will:
His will, proved in Perth Amboy, NJ, October 23, 1705
(LIb. 1, p. 12, NJ Wills), deeded many hundreds of acres to
his heirs.
Richard married Penelope Van Princis (or Prince), (immigrant) in 1644. Penelope was born in 1622 in Amsterdam, Holland; died in 1732 in Middletown, Monmouth Co, New Jersey; was buried in Old Lippit-Taylor Burying Ground, Monmouth Co, New Jersey. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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