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Richard Stout - was born in 1615 in Nottinghamshire, Burton Joyce Par, England.
He is the son of John Stout.
Richard married Penelope in 1644 in Gravesend, Long Island, New Amsterdam.
Richard -
was NOT married to Penelope Thompson. See source reference from Bill Stout.
Richard Stout,the first of the name in America was born in Nottinghamshire, in Old England, and his father’s name was John. The said Richard, when quite young paid his addresses to a young woman that his father thought below his rank, upon which account some unpleasant conversation happened between the father and the son, on account of which, the said Richard left his father’s house; and in a few days engaged on board a ship of war, where he served about seven years, after which time he got a discharge at New Amsterdam, now called New York, in America. About the same time a ship from Amsterdam, in Holland, on her way to the said New Amsterdam, was driven on the shore that is now called Middletown, in Monmouth County, in the State of New Jersey, which ship was loaded with passengers, who with much difficulty got on shore. But the Indians not long after fell upon them and butchered and killed the whole crew, as they thought, but soon after the Indians were gone, a certain Penelope Van Princes, whose husband the Indians had killed, found herself possessed of strength enough to creep to a hollow tree, where she remained some days. An Indian happening to come that way, whose dog coming to the tree, occasioned him to examine the inside of the tree, where he found the said Penelope in a forlorn, distressed condition. She was bruised very severely about the head, and her bowels protruded from a cut across her abdomen; she kept them in with her hand. She had been in this fearful condition seven days when the Indian found her. In his compassion he took her out of the tree and carried her to his wigwam where he treated her kindly and healed her wounds, and in a short time conveyed her in his canoe to New Amsterdam, where he sold her to the Dutch, who then owned that city, now called New York. The man and woman from whom the whole race of Stouts descended, got into the city of New Amsterdam, where they became acquainted with each other and were married. And, not withstanding, it may be thought by some, that they conducted themselves with more fortitude than prudence, they immediately crossed the bay and settled in the above said Middletown, where the said Penelope had lost her first husband by the Indians and had been so severely wounded herself. There was at that time but six white families in the settlement, including their own, (which was in the year 1648), where they continued until they became rich in prosperity and rich in children. They had together seven sons and three daughters, viz: John, Richard, Jonathan, Peter, James, Benjamin, David. The daughters were Deliverance, Sarah, Penelope. All of which sons and daughters lived to raise large families. |
(The History of the Stout Family) |
(Sources: - 2 - 3 - 4)
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Children: (Quick Family Chart) |
| i. |
Sarah Elizabeth Stout was born in 1656 in Gravesend, Kings Co., LI, NY.
Sarah married John Pike.
John was born in 1650 in Gravesend, Kings Co., LI, NY.
He died in 1714 in Woodbridge, Middlesex Co., NJ .
John -
Was the great-great-grandfather of Zebulon Pike (John , Zebulon 1793, James 1721, Zebulon 1751, Zebulon Montgomery Pike 1779), whio discovered and named Pike's Peak.
A man named Freegift Stout was on Zebulon Pike's expedition in 1806.
"We know that Zebulon Montgomery Pike was born in Lamberton (Somerset County), New Jersey on January 5, 1779. He was the second of eight children, and the only one to grow to robust adulthood. Four of his siblings died in infancy, the other three were hopeless tuberculosis cases, invalids throughout their lives. At the time that he was born, Pike's father, also named Zebulon Pike, was an officer in George Washington's army, then engaged in
fighting the British for American Independence. The elder Pike continued to serve in the military at the conclusion of the war, and young Zebulon grew up on frontier military posts as a result. The elder Pike survived Gen. Arthur St. Clair's defeat in Ohio in 1791, and brought his family to live in Cincinnati while serving with "Mad Anthony" Wayne's Legion. Young Zebulon's formal
education was necessarily limited, although he enjoyed reading and learned French and some Spanish as well as the English language. At age 15, Pike entered his father's regiment as a cadet, and was put in charge of supplying frontier posts in Ohio."
(Sources: - 5)
(Sources: - 5)
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| ii. |
David Stout was born in 1667 in Middletown, Monmouth, New Jersey and died in 1732 in Amwell, Hunterdon, New Jersey and was buried in Stout Burial Plot .
See #3. below.
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