See also

Family of Charles Ward Apthorp and Mary McEvers

  • Husband:

  • Charles Ward Apthorp (1726-1797)

  • Wife:

  • Mary McEvers ( - )

  • Marriage:

  • 27 Feb 1755

  • Trinity Parish Church, New York

Husband: Charles Ward Apthorp

  • Name:

  • Charles Ward Apthorp

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Father:

  • Charles Apthorp (1698-1758)

  • Mother:

  • Grizzel Eastwick (1709-1796)

  • Note (shared):

  • CHARLES WARD APTHORP, the eldest son of Charles Apthorp, married in New York Mary McEvers. He had three sons and three daughters. Of his daughters, Charlotte Augusta was the only one who left descendants. Her husband was John Cornelius Vanden Heuvel, a Dutch gentleman of fortune, who had been Governor of Demerara and afterwards settled in New York. Maria Eliza, their eldest daughter, married John C. Hamilton, a son of the celebrated Alexander Hamilton.

    Charles Ward Apthorp was a member of the Council of New York in 1763 and served until 1783. He had lands in Maine and a large amount of property in Boston, Brookline, and Roxbury, all of which was confiscated. He died at his seat, Bloomingdale, in 1797.

    James H. Stark, The Loyalists of Massachusetts and the Other Side of the American Revolution, 1910, page 352

  • Birth:

  • 1726

  • Boston, Massachusetts

  • Death:

  • May 1797 (age 70-71)

  • Bloomingdale, New York

Wife: Mary McEvers

  • Name:

  • Mary McEvers

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Father:

  • -

  • Mother:

  • -

Note on Husband: Charles Ward Apthorp - shared note

CHARLES WARD APTHORP, the eldest son of Charles Apthorp, married in New York Mary McEvers. He had three sons and three daughters. Of his daughters, Charlotte Augusta was the only one who left descendants. Her husband was John Cornelius Vanden Heuvel, a Dutch gentleman of fortune, who had been Governor of Demerara and afterwards settled in New York. Maria Eliza, their eldest daughter, married John C. Hamilton, a son of the celebrated Alexander Hamilton.

Charles Ward Apthorp was a member of the Council of New York in 1763 and served until 1783. He had lands in Maine and a large amount of property in Boston, Brookline, and Roxbury, all of which was confiscated. He died at his seat, Bloomingdale, in 1797.

James H. Stark, The Loyalists of Massachusetts and the Other Side of the American Revolution, 1910, page 352