William Van Wyck, 18031867 (aged 64 years)

Name
William /Van Wyck/
Given names
William
Surname
Van Wyck
Birth
Death of a paternal grandmother
Death of a maternal grandfather
Death of a paternal grandfather
Death of a maternal grandmother
Birth of a son
Marriage
Birth of a son
Death of a mother
Death of a father
Death of a son
Death
June 30, 1867 (aged 64 years)
Family with parents
father
17671852
Birth: October 21, 1767 32 33
Death: January 30, 1852West Neck, LI, NY
mother
Marriage MarriageJanuary 24, 1792
11 years
himself
18031867
Birth: January 21, 1803 35 31 Huntington, LI, NY
Death: June 30, 1867New York, NY
Family with Lydia A. Maverick
himself
18031867
Birth: January 21, 1803 35 31 Huntington, LI, NY
Death: June 30, 1867New York, NY
wife
Marriage Marriage1833Pendleton, NC
17 years
son
18491918
Birth: July 20, 1849 46 35 New York, NY
Death: November 14, 1918Paris, France
-19 years
son
18301861
Birth: April 24, 1830 27 15 New York, NY
Death: 1861Marion, KY
Shared note

Encyclopedia of Biography of New York:
William Van Wyck, youngest son of Abraham and Zeruah (Van Wyck) Van
Wyck, was born January 24, 1803, and died June 30, 1867. He resided
in New York City, was a distinguished lawyer, often in the public
service, and a judicial officer. He married, in 1833, Lydia Anderson
Maverick, of South Carolina, born in Charleston, in 1814, daughter
of Samuel and Elizabeth (Anderson) Maverick, granddaughter of General
Robert Anderson, a distinguished soldier in the War of the Revolution,
and a public officer of the State of South Carolina for over thirty
years, the county of Anderson being named in his honor, and a descendant
of John Maverick, who was among the earliest settlers of Charleston,
and whose brother, Samuel Maverick, settled in Boston in 1630.

Children:
Children: Samuel Maverick, M. D., died 1861; William, died 1887;
Zeruah, married Charles Banks, of New York; Abraham; Mary; and a
second Abraham, died in infancy; Augustus and Robert A., who receive
further mention in this work; Lydia Ann Maverick, married General
Robert Hoke, of Raleigh, North Carolina; Benjamin Stevens, a physician,
died in 1888.