Catalina Trico
Catalina Trico or Catalyntje Jeronimus Trico (also spelled Catilyn Trico; 1605 – 1689) was a Walloon colonist. Trico and her husband Joris Jansen Rapelje (1604–1662), both originally from Wallonia in modern day Belgium, were among the first group of European settlers in Northeast North America in what was then the Dutch colony of New Netherland. Trico and Rapelje traveled on a shipped named the Eendrach, arriving to Fort Orange in New Netherland in 1624.[1][2][3]
Early life
Catalina was born in what was then known as the Spanish Netherlands, an area that later became part of Belgium.[1]
Moving to the New World
Catalina and her husband were Walloons, French-speaking Protestants, practicing in the Calvinistic tradition.[1] Trico stepped foot onto the New World when the ship dropped them and their shipmates in Fort Orange, present-day Albany, where they stayed for two years until Pieter Minuit, serving as governor of the colony, decided to consolidate the two outposts into one and that all should be resettled on Manhattan Island to ensure safety from the Native Americans and for the better management of their farming practices.[1] The couple found success in New Amsterdam and eventually Joris purchased 335 acres in Wallabout Bay in Brooklyn.[1]
Catalina and Joris had eleven children.[4] Their daughter Sara Rapelje (1625-c.1686) is described as the "first European Christian female child born in New Netherland," although this is disputed by some.[1]
Deposition of Catilyn Trico
A document dated from 1688, in the New York State Archives, Trico, at age 82, describes the first settlements at Albany, Hartford and the Delaware; as well as, early exploration, settlement, and relations with Native Americans.[5]
References
- ^ a b c d e f "Catalina Trico (ID: 660,031) | Mapping Early New York: Encyclopedia". encyclopedia.nahc-mapping.org.
- ^ The Ulster County Genealogical Society's Families of Ulster County: The descendants of Anthonis Gherits Middach, 1480–1997. The Society. 1998.
- ^ "Catalina Trico | CultureNow – Museum Without Walls". culturenow.org. Retrieved 2025-11-07.
- ^ Hutchinson, Jack Thomas (1989). Leaves from the Tree, an American Heritage: A History of the Ancestral Families of Robert Bone Hutchinson and Jack Thomas Hutchinson. Anundsen.
- ^ "Document: Deposition of Catilyn Trico | Mapping Early New York: Encyclopedia". encyclopedia.nahc-mapping.org. Retrieved 2025-11-07.