DeWolf family


The DeWolf family is a prominent Canadian and American family that traces its roots to Balthazar DeWolf. The family's lineage can be traced back to Balthazar DeWolf, who was born in 1620 in the Netherlands and later immigrated to North America.
The DeWolf family played a significant role in the early colonial history of North America, particularly in the regions of New England and the Atlantic Canadian provinces. They were involved in various industries, including shipping, trade, and later, the slave trade.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, certain individuals from the DeWolf family rose to prominence as slave traders and held plantations in the Caribbean. They were deeply involved in the transatlantic slave trade, accumulating significant wealth from this enterprise.
In recent times, numerous descendants of the DeWolf family have been actively involved in confronting their ancestors' history of slave trading through their participation in documentaries, authoring books, and engaging in public discussions, these family members have openly addressed their family's past involvement in the slave trade.

Balthazar DeWolf

Balthazar DeWolf is first mentioned in the records of Hartford, Connecticut, in 1656. He married a woman named Alice by 1646, it is not known where. Some believe she was Alice Peck, born on 26 February 1625, in Liddington, Rutland, England, a daughter of William Peck and Elizabeth Holt. They had at least five children. After 1668 they settled in Lyme, Connecticut.
It is thought that Balthazar DeWolf was from the Livonian branch of DeWolfs, which is an offshoot of the Saxon branch. However, that is only one of the most commonly cited versions, others mentioning that Balthazar DeWolf was a Huguenot, or Pole, or Russian, or Jew, or Dutch, or German. There is a high possibility that DeWolf was English or educated in England as he and his children only married to other English settlers, which was very common at the time.
There is also information that Abel, Dirck, and Balthazar De Wolf emigrated from Holland to New Amsterdam, New York. While Balthazar settled in Wethersfield, Connecticut in 1664, the other two returned to Holland.
Both Nova Scotia's and Rhode Island's DeWolfs are descendants of Balthazar DeWolf as shown below:
  • Balthazar DeWolf, m. Alice ____
  • * Edward DeWolf, m. Rebecca ____, had at least three sons
  • ** Simon DeWolf, m. Martha, who later m. Nathaniel Clark
  • *** John DeWolf
  • **** Nathan DeWolf, probably son of John, m. 1. Lydia Kirtland; 2. Anna Witter; emigrated to Nova Scotia.
  • *** Josiah DeWolf
  • ** Charles DeWolf, m. Prudence Beckwith
  • *** Charles DeWolf of Guadeloupe, m. Margaret Potter
  • **** Simon DeWolf
  • **** Prudence DeWolf
  • **** Sarah DeWolf
  • **** Mark Anthony DeWolf, m. Abigail Potter ; patriarch of the Bristol branch
  • *** Matthew DeWolf
  • **** Patience DeWolf
  • **** Ezra DeWolf
  • **** Matthew DeWolf, m. 1. Eunice Baker; 2. Elizabeth Burchard
  • **** Samuel DeWolf
  • **** Peter DeWolf
  • **** Edward DeWolf
  • *** Simon DeWolf
  • *** John DeWolf
  • *** Stephen DeWolf
  • *** Lyman DeWolf
  • *** Prudence DeWolf
  • *** Mary DeWolf
  • *** Elizabeth DeWolf
  • *** Rebekah DeWolf
  • *** Joseph DeWolf of Glastonbury, Connecticut, m. Tabitha Johnson
  • **** Abdi Dolph, m. Mary Coleman; changed the spelling of his last name from DeWolf to Dolph; forefather of Joseph N. Dolph and Cyrus A. Dolph
  • **** Prudence DeWolf
  • ** Benjamin DeWolf, m. Susannah Douglas
  • *** Simeon DeWolf, m. Parnell Kirtland, emigrated to Nova Scotia
  • **** Elizabeth DeWolf, m. William Andrews
  • **** Hon. Benjamin DeWolf, m. Rachel Otis, daughter of Nathaniel Kirtland and Phoebe DeWolf; forefather of Eliza Amelia Gore, for twenty-eight years Lady-in-waiting to Queen Victoria.
  • **** John DeWolf, m. 1. Susanna Hatch; 2. Elizabeth Graham
  • **** James DeWolf, m. 1. Keturah Calkin; 2. Nancy Lawrence; 3. Jane Parker
  • **** Charles DeWolf, m. Sabra Harding; 2. Sarah Miner
  • **** Lucy DeWolf, m. Jonathan Wilson
  • ** Edward DeWolf
  • ** Stephen DeWolf, m. Elizabeth
  • *** Gideon DeWolf
  • *** Stephen DeWolf
  • *** Charles DeWolf
  • * Simon DeWolf, m. Sarah Lay
  • ** Simon DeWolf
  • ** Sarah DeWolf
  • ** John DeWolf, died unmarried
  • ** Josiah DeWolf, m. 1. Anna Waterman; 2. Abigail Lord
  • ** Phoebe DeWolf, m. Joseph Mather
  • ** Daniel DeWolf, m. Phoebe Marvin, who m. Nathaniel Kirtland
  • ** Jabez DeWolf
  • * Stephen DeWolf, m. 1. Sarah Terry; 2. Hannah Jones
  • ** Edward DeWolf
  • ** Deborah DeWolf, m. Aaaron Huntley
  • *** Hannah Huntley, m. Ebenezer Mack
  • ** Hannah DeWolf
  • ** Stephen DeWolf, m. Hannah
  • *** Lewis DeWolf, lived in Lyme, was blind
  • *** Benjamin DeWolf Jr, m. Lucy Champion
  • *** Edward DeWolf
  • *** Josiah DeWolf
  • ** Benjamin DeWolf, m. Margaret ; moved to Killingworth, Connecticut
  • *** Jehiel DeWolf
  • *** Hester DeWolf
  • *** Jehiel DeWolf 2nd, m. Phoebe Cobb; emigrated to Nova Scotia
  • **** Phoebe DeWolf, m. Ezekiel Comstock
  • **** Jehiel DeWolf, m. 1. Elizabeth Martin; 2. Anna Witter
  • **** Margaret DeWolf, m. 1. Samuel Witter; 2. James Brown
  • **** Oliver DeWolf, m. Amy Bishop
  • **** Daniel DeWolf, m. Lydia Kirtland Harris
  • **** Jerusha DeWolf, m. Peter Martin
  • **** Eunice DeWolf, m. Caleb Forsyth
  • **** Lydia DeWolf, m. 1. Samuel Starr; 2. Cyrus Peck; 3. Moses Stevens; with Samuel they are great-grandparents of Rev. Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton.
  • *** Stephen DeWolf
  • *** Phoebe DeWolf
  • *** Elijah DeWolf, m. Submit Wilcox
  • *** Esther DeWolf, m. a Wheeler
  • *** Phoebe DeWolf
  • ** Lewis DeWolf
  • *** Edward DeWolf, m. Hannah Ely
  • ** Phoebe DeWolf
  • ** Josiah DeWolf
  • * Mary DeWolf, m. 1. Thomas Lee, 1676; 2. Matthew Griswold of Lyme, 1705, connecting the DeWolfs to the Griswold family
  • ** Hannah Griswold, m. Judge John Griswold
  • *** Matthew Griswold, the 17th Governor of Connecticut.
  • *** Phoebe Griswold
  • * Susannah DeWolf, m. 1. Henry Champion, 1684; 2. John Huntley, 1709
  • * Joseph DeWolf

Rhode Island branch

The Bristol or Rhode Island branch sprang from Charles DeWolf of Guadeloupe, who was born in Lyme, New London, Connecticut, the son of Charles DeWolf and Prudence DeWolf. He emigrated to Guadeloupe, the French West Indies. During the 18th and 19th centuries the D'Wolfs of Rhode Island were the largest slave traders in the state.

Notable members

Legacy

DeWolf avenue in Bristol, Rhode Island is named after the DeWolfs.
In total, the Bristol DeWolfs are believed to have transported more than 11,000 slaves to the United States before the African slave trade was banned in 1808.

DeWolfs of Nova Scotia

In 1761, three of Balthazar DeWolf's descendants, Simeon, Nathan and Jehiel DeWolf, with households amounting to 19 persons immigrated to Horton Township, Nova Scotia, to settle in the Grand Pre area. Evelyn M. Salisbury's genealogy published in 1892 identified the three men as cousins and it also appeared in A. W. H. Eaton's, History of Kings County, despite Eaton's efforts to change some parts of Salisbury's genealogy. In 1991 the publication of Dolphs and De Wolfs by Carol Stark Maginnis after extensive research of original sources, reviewing the correspondence between Rev. Eaton and Mrs. Stainsbury, and examining the research of the Lyme Study Group, concluded the men were three sons of Benjamin DeWolf Sr., who was a son of Steven and grandson of Balthazar. This matches Eaton's original belief the Nova Scotia family were descendants of Steven DeWolf, which had been disregarded in Salisbury's work, and which he then copied in his own books.

Notable members

Legacy

Wolfville, Nova Scotia was renamed after the DeWolf family. Elisha DeWolf, Jr. was the postmaster of the community when the postal district name became official on August 13, 1830, replacing prior names including Mud Creek and Upper Horton. It was suggested the change was out of respect for his namesake father, Elisha DeWolf.

Other DeWolfs