Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Our Hallowell Quaker family and the Easton Treaty of 1757


The Friendly Association for Regaining and Preserving Peace with the Indians by Pacific Measures was established in Philadelphia in 1756 by Israel Pemberton and other wealthy Quakers. It aimed to end violence on the Pennsylvania frontier through diplomacy, negotiation, and humanitarian efforts rather than military action.

Key aspects of the Association included:

  • Mission: Founded during the French and Indian War to restore peace with Indigenous groups by addressing grievances through peaceful measures.
  • Actions: The group was heavily involved in treaty negotiations, notably providing input and promoting peace initiatives during the Treaty of Easton in the late 1750s.
  • Key Figures: Led by Quaker leader and merchant Israel Pemberton.
  • Legacy: The group is noted for distributing peace medals to Indigenous leaders to symbolize their commitment to friendship.
  • Significance: It represented a significant effort by Pennsylvania Quakers to uphold their pacifist testimonies in the face of frontier conflict. 
  • Documentation: The group's efforts are documented in the "Friendly Association Papers" and a 1877 book by Samuel Parrish. 

Their efforts often placed them in conflict with colonial authorities who favored armed responses to conflicts with Native Americans. 





The connection between the Hallowell Quaker family and the Easton Treaty of 1757 (and 1758) is part of a broader, documented effort by Pennsylvania Quakers to mediate between the Lenape Indians and the Pennsylvania colonial government during the French and Indian War. 


The Hallowell Quaker Family

  • Origin: The Hallowell family were prominent Pennsylvania Quakers, founded by John and Mary Hallowell who arrived from England in 1682, settling first near Darby and later in Abington Township.
  • Quaker Context: Members of this family would have belonged to the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Society of Friends, the group heavily involved in Indian diplomacy, especially through the "Friendly Association."

The Hallowell Family & The Friendly Association 

  • Quaker Activism: The Hallowells were a prominent Pennsylvania Quaker family settled in the Abington/Horsham area. In the 1750s, they were part of the Society of Friends who believed in maintaining the "Holy Experiment" of peaceful relations with Native Americans.
  • The Friendly Association: Members of the family, including Thomas Hallowell, were affiliated with the Friendly Association for Regaining and Preserving Peace with the Indians by Pacific Measures, a group established in 1756 by Philadelphia Quakers.
  • Treaty Involvement: The Friendly Association, led by Israel Pemberton, attended the 1757 Easton conference to support the Lenape against unfair proprietary land grabs, particularly the Walking Purchase of 1737. 


Gen 1

Thomas Hallowell - Immigrant

BIRTH 6 JUL 1679 • Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, England

DEATH 14 DECEMBER 1734 • Abington, Montgomery Co., PA

7th great-grandfather

Parents:

John Hallowell immigrant 1647–1706

Mary Sarah Holland 1651–1701

Spouse:

Rosamond Till 1677–1745

D/o:

John Till 1652–1710

Mary Jackson 1650–1684

Children:

John Hallowell 1703–1734

William Hallowell 1707–1793

Thomas Hallowell 1715–1788

Samuel Hallowell 1717–

Joseph Hallowell 1719–1759


Gen 2

i. William Hallowell

Birth 1 AUG 1707 • Abington, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Death 23 AUG 1793 • Abington, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

6th great-grandfather

Parents:

Thomas Hallowell 1679–1734

Rosamond Till 1677–1745

Spouse (1):

Margaret Tyson 1708–1752

D/o:

Mathias Tyson 1686–1727

Mary Potts 1688–1762

Children:

Rosamond Hallowell 1731–1745

Matthew Hallowell 1733–1805

William Hallowell Jr 1734–1820

John Hallowell 1736–1745

Rynear Hallowell 1739–1788

David Hallowell 1740–1782

Mary Hallowell 1742–1743

Isaac Hallowell 1744–1745

John Hallowell 1746–1748

Joshua Hallowell 1751–1835

Spouse (2):

Agnes Shoemaker 1716–1782

Spouse (3):

Agnes Cleaver 1710–1757


ii. Thomas Hallowell

Birth 12 MARCH 1715 • Abington Monthly Mtg, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Death 4 NOV 1788 • Abington, Montgomery, Pennsylvania, United States

6th great-granduncle

Parents:

Thomas Hallowell 1679–1734

Rosamond Till 1677–1745

Siblings

Spouse (1):

Mary Craft 1715–1745

Spouse (2):

Margaret Tyson 1724–1788


iii. Joseph Hallowell

Birth 23 SEP 1719 • Abington, Montgomery, Pennsylvania, USA

Death 5 NOV 1759 • Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, United States of America

6th great-granduncle

Parents:

Thomas Hallowell 1679–1734

Rosamond Till 1677–1745

Spouse (1):

Hannah Ball 1715–1779

Spouse (2):

Sarah Nanney

1725–1799



The 1757 Easton Peace Medal—often referred to as the "Quaker Medal" or "Duffield Medal"—was commissioned and approved by The Friendly Association for Regaining and Preserving Peace with the Indians by Pacific Means


Key Quakers and individuals involved with this committee or the production of the medal included:

  • Israel Pemberton Jr.: A leading Philadelphia Quaker merchant and a key founder/leader of the Friendly Association.
  • Joseph Richardson Sr.: A prominent Philadelphia Quaker silversmith who manufactured and struck the medals.
  • Edward Duffield: A Philadelphia clockmaker and friend of Benjamin Franklin who engraved the dies for the medal.
  • Other Friendly Association members: The group, including our Hallowells, was composed of Philadelphia Quaker merchants aiming to restore peace with Native Americans through diplomacy rather than war. 

Context of the 1757 Medal:

  • Purpose: The medal was designed to foster goodwill and peace with Native American tribes during the French and Indian War, specifically at the Treaty of Easton.
  • Design: It featured King George II on the obverse, and on the reverse, a Quaker and a Native American sharing a peace pipe under a tree and sun, inscribed with: "LET US LOOK TO THE MOST HIGH WHO BLESSED OUR FATHERS WITH PEACE".
  • Significance: It is considered the first Indian peace medal made in America.

Bronze Replicas of the 1757 Easton Peace Medal:


The United States Mint began producing bronze replicas of the 1757 Easton Peace Medal (also known as the George II or Quaker medal) using original or early copy dies in the early 19th century, with records indicating restrikes were produced as early as 1825. 


The U.S. Mint continued to produce these replicas throughout the 19th century, with a specific, new reproduction die being engraved in 1883 to strike new medals beginning in 1885.  


Based on a restrike from the National Museum of the American Indian collection, the Mint created bronze replicas of the 1757 medal as late as the 1970s (roughly 1975). These, along with other 19th-century reproductions, are often in the ~1 3/4 inch size, as the original medals were 44 mm in diameter (about 1.73 inches). 




Reverse Description (above):

Two figures seated at left and right of a camp fire, a white man wearing hat on the right presents a calumet of peace (Peace Pipe) which the American Indian on the left is reaching for; above the Indian the sun watches; behind the white man, a tree; around, LET US LOOK TO THE MOST HIGH WHO BLESSED OUR FATHERS WITH PEACE; below scene, 1757.



Obverse Description (above):

A draped and laureate bust of the King facing left; around, GEORGIVS II DEI GRATIA.


Thank you to Grok xAI and Gemini AI for updated information supporting my original research.  -- Drifting Cowboy










Saturday, March 14, 2026

Great grandfather, Jurian Haff, was a 1640s Field Trumpeter in the Army of the Dutch Empire of Brazil

 


Jurian (Juriaen/George) Haff’s Military Service: Full Exploration

All known details trace back to a single primary document: the Brooklyn Dutch Reformed Church records (dated 22 November 1662, under “Orphans of the Deaconry”). This entry was created when Laurens Haff (age ~13) and his half-sibling became wards after Teuntje’s death. It explicitly lists Jurian’s origin, rank, unit, commander, posting, and exact discharge to establish the boy’s legitimacy and guardianship. No WIC muster rolls, payrolls, or personal military files naming him have surfaced in public archives or digitized sources.


Verbatim Primary Record Quote (from the 1662 Brooklyn Church entry)

“LAURENS HAFF from Brazil, aged about thirteen years, was the son of ‘the late GEORGE HAFF from Auspurg (Augsburg), Foot Trumpeter of the States of the United Netherlands under Captain Claassen, who duly discharged the former on June 23, 1649, and of TEUNTIE STRAETSMANS (STRAETSMAN) from Culenburg…’”


The same church records (and later genealogies quoting them) add that he served “under Count John Maurice of Nassau-Siegen, Governor-General of the Dutch Empire of Brazil, at Fort Antonio at the mouth of the river Parahyba de Norte, which was changed to the name of Fort Marguerite in honor of the sister of Count Maurice.” He was “honorably discharged from service on June 23, 1649, in Brazil.” 


Service Profile

  • Rank: Foot / Field Trumpeter (Dutch: trompetter). In 17th-century armies this was a skilled specialist role—responsible for signaling commands, charges, retreats, parleys, and ceremonies across noisy battlefields or garrisons. WIC soldiers often included German Protestants like Jurian (from Augsburg, Swabia).
  • Employer / Unit: Dutch West India Company (WIC) / States of the United Netherlands, under Captain Claassen (Claussen).
  • Commander & Governor: Served during / under Count Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen (governor-general of Dutch Brazil 1637–1644; the fort renaming honors his sister).
  • Posting: Fort Antonio (renamed Fort Marguerite), mouth of the Paraíba do Norte River (modern João Pessoa area, Paraíba state, Brazil—near Recife/Pernambuco). This was a key defensive river-mouth fort guarding Dutch-held northeast Brazil. 
  • Service Period: At least 1637–23 June 1649 (tied to Count Maurice’s arrival; discharge came during the late phase of Dutch control). His twin sons Laurens and Pieter were baptized 30 June 1649 in the Recife Dutch Reformed Church (Fort Marguerite vicinity), so he was alive and in Brazil at discharge. 
  • Outcome: Honorably discharged in Brazil. He died shortly afterward (1649–1654). Teuntje and Laurens joined the ~1654 Dutch refugee exodus after the Portuguese reconquest.


No specific battles, wounds, promotions, or pay details are recorded—typical for a non-officer WIC soldier. He was likely a career garrison trumpeter rather than a campaign hero.


Historical Context (Dutch Brazil / New Holland, 1630–1654)

The WIC seized northeast Brazil from Portugal in the 1630s. Recife became the capital (renamed Mauritsstad). Forts like Antônio/Marguerite protected river access and sugar plantations. Count Maurits’s governorship (1637–1644) was the high point—arts, science, and tolerance flourished alongside military defense. By 1645–1654 Portuguese forces (aided by locals) gradually reconquered everything; 1649 fell in the brutal endgame. Thousands of Dutch, Germans, and mixed families fled in 1654 under capitulation terms—exactly when Teuntje and Laurens reached New Amsterdam. 


Sources & Cross-References

  • Brooklyn Dutch Reformed Church Records (Holland Society Archives, pp. 223–227 etc.) — the 1662 orphan entry is the foundational document. 
  • Quoted in: Genealogy of Delbert James Haff (full text), Centennial History of Missouri (p. 423), Allaben’s The Crall Ancestry, Teunis G. Bergen’s Early Settlers of Kings County, Riker’s History of Harlem, Brouwer Genealogy Database, WikiTree (Haff-43), Geni profiles, and modern articles (e.g., Gotham Center on Teuntje Straetmans). 
  • No contradictions across sources; all derive from the same church record.


This fleshes out the brief “field trumpeter… under Captain Claassen… Fort Antonio/Fort Marguerite… discharged 23 June 1649” from our Missouri book excerpt into the complete picture. The service placed him (and later his widow/son) squarely in one of the most dramatic colonial chapters of the 17th century.


Haff Family History Notes:


Generation Z – 10th Great-Grandfather

Juriaen (George / Jurian) Haff

Birth: abt. 1618 • Augsburg, Swabia (now southern Bavaria), Germany

Death: shortly after June 1649 (most sources) or by 1654 • Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil  

Parents (claimed in collaborative trees; no primary German church records located):  

  • Father: Nicolas Haff (b. 26 Apr 1587 Annweiler am Trifels, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany – d. 22 Jan 1669 same place)  
  • Mother: Margaretha Arnold (b. 1591 Obersontheim, Württemberg, Germany – d. 9 Feb 1663 Annweiler)

Military Service (confirmed in 1662 Brooklyn Dutch Reformed Church orphan records):

Field / Foot Trumpeter (trompetter) for the States of the United Netherlands under the Dutch West India Company. Served under Captain Claassen at Fort Antonio (later renamed Fort Marguerite after Count John Maurice’s sister) at the mouth of the Paraíba do Norte River. Honorably discharged 23 June 1649 in Brazil. The same church entry states he was “from Auspurg” (Augsburg) and that his father had migrated from Swabia to Holland for Protestant religious reasons.

Spouse (second wife):

Teuntje (Teuntie / Teuntje Straetsman / Straatmans)

Birth: abt. 1605 • Culemborg (Culenburg), Gelderland, Netherlands

Death: 19 Oct 1662 • Gowanus (Cujanes), Brooklyn, Long Island  

Teuntje was widow of Dutch ship captain Jan Meyer (Meÿerinck). They had two daughters born in Recife:  

  • Mauritie (bapt. 1 Nov 1637)  
  • Margarita/Margariet (bapt. 20 Apr 1639)

After Jurian’s death she married third: Tileman Jacobs Van der Myen (daughter Annetje Tienemans b. 1654), then fourth: Gabriel Corbesÿe (15 June 1657 New Amsterdam; son David bapt. 1659, d. young).

She migrated to New Amsterdam/Breuckelen ~1654–1657 with her children and died leaving Laurens (13) and Annetje (~8) as wards of the Dutch church. Her estate inventory (25 Oct 1662) lists livestock, crops, land, and 60 guilders seawant.

Children (with Teuntje):  

  • Laurens Haff (see below)  
  • Pieter Haeff (bapt. same day as Laurens; died before 1662 – possible twin)

Half-siblings (from Teuntje’s first marriage): Mauritie and Margarita Meyer.


Generation 1 – 9th Great-Grandfather

Laurens (Lourens Jeuriansen / Lawrence) Haff, immigrant

Birth: 3 June 1649 • Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil (bapt. 30 June 1649 Recife Dutch Reformed Church; witnesses: Hans Connraet, Pieter de Mee, Lucas Beucker, Hans Voogelhooft)

Death: April 1718 • Long Island City / Jamaica, Queens, New York  

Spouse (m. 5 July 1676 Flatbush Dutch Reformed Church; engaged 18 June):

Kniertje Cunira (Kniertje Pieters Meet / Meert)

Birth: 1655 • Amersfoort, Utrecht, Netherlands

Death: October 1722 • Jamaica, Queens, New York  

Residences: Midwoud/Flatbush, Gravesend/Brooklyn (taxed 1683 – 22 acres), Flushing; signed Jamaica church pledge 1715.

Laurens was apprenticed after his mother’s death (first to Henricus Selyns for 6 years, then Willem Gerritsen Couwenhoven for 3 years).

Full Children (11 known, Flatbush/Brooklyn Dutch Reformed Church baptisms; our direct line highlighted):  

  1. Pieter (bapt. ~1677) m. Wyntje Hercks Luyster  
  2. Jurian/Uriah (bapt. 18 May 1679)  
  3. Theunis/Teuntje (bapt. 24 Jul 1681)  
  4. Styntje (bapt. 5 Aug 1683) m. Dirck DeMott  
  5. Maria (bapt. 15 Jun 1685) m. Frances Marston  
  6. Johannce/Jan (~1686)  
  7. Jacobus/Jakop (bapt. 11 Sep 1689)  
  8. Theuntje (~1691) m. Johannes Wiltsee  
  9. Margarietje / Margrietje Haff (abt. 1694 Flatbush – 1745 Reading, Hunterdon, New Jersey) – our 8th great-grandmother m. Peter Monfoort/Monfort  
  10. Sarah (~1697) m. 1723 Joseph Halstead  
  11. Lourens (bapt. 30 Apr 1699) m. Marytje Kouk


Direct Line Continuation

  • Margarietje Haff (1694–1745) daughter Kniertje Monfoort (1719–1770)  
  • Kniertje Monfoort daughter Margrietje Joost “Margaret” Schamp (1739–1773)  
  • Margrietje Joost Schamp daughter Rhoda McDonald (DNA match, 1773–1859)  
  • Rhoda McDonald son Job Groom (1795–1823)  
  • Job Groom daughter Sarah Groom (Grooms) (1815–1858)  
  • Sarah Groom daughter Sophia Boyd (1836–1908) – our 2× great-grandmother


Consolidated Notes & Primary Sources

The core military and migration story comes verbatim from the Centennial History of Missouri (Walter Barlow Stevens, p. 423) and the 22 November 1662 Brooklyn Dutch Reformed Church “Orphans of the Deaconry” entry (Holland Society Archives). These records are the single primary source for Jurian’s origin, rank, unit, commander, fort, and discharge date.  


All Recife baptisms, Teuntje’s remarriages, Laurens’ apprenticeship, and the 11 children are drawn from compiled Dutch Reformed Church registers (Recife, New Amsterdam, Flatbush, Brooklyn) as summarized in:  

  • Teunis G. Bergen, Early Settlers of Kings County  
  • Brouwer Genealogy Database  
  • WikiTree (Haff-43)  
  • Gotham Center articles on Teuntje Straetmans  
  • Long Island genealogy family sheets


No original WIC muster rolls naming Jurian have been located; the 1662 church entry remains the authoritative document. The 1654 Brazilian exodus (Portuguese reconquest) explains the family’s arrival in New Netherland exactly when New Amsterdam was still Dutch.


This revised summary corrects the birthplace of Teuntje, adds her full marital/children history, includes Laurens’ twin brother and 10 additional siblings, tightens Jurian’s death range, and integrates the military details without altering our direct blood line. The downstream generations from Margarietje onward remain exactly as you provided and are strengthened by the DNA match reference.


Thank you to Grok xAI for the deep dive and supporting details for this story.  -- Drifting Cowboy