• Isaac Hendricksen Kip had a son, Jacobus. In 1685 King
James II of England issued a royal grant known today as the
Rombout Patent for some of land
Francis Rombouts,
Stephanus Van Cortlandt (both former
mayors of New York City) and Gulian Verplanck purchased from
Wappinger Indians on the east bank of the
Hudson River in what is today's southern
Dutchess County,
New York. However, Verplanck died in 1684 and his widow Henrika married Jacobus Kip, and the family's share of the patent passed down through that line. • Hendrick Hendricksen Kip is mentioned in
Washington Irving's 1809 satirical history ''The Knickerbocker's History of New York
in the following (ahistorical) anecdote.[A group of Dutch settlers were sailing down the East River in a small boat:] "While the voyagers were looking around them, on what they conceived to be a serene and sunny lake, they beheld at a distance a crew of painted savages busily employed in fishing, who seemed more like the genii of this romantic region -- their slender canoe lightly balanced like a feather on the undulating surface of the bay. At sight of these, the hearts of the heroes on
Communipaw were not a little troubled. But as good fortune would have it, at the bow of the commodore's boat was stationed a very valiant man named Hendrick Kip (which, being interpreted, means chicken; a name given him on token of his courage). No sooner did he behold those varlet heathens than he trembled with excessive valor, and, although a good half mile distant, he seized a
musketoon that lay at hand, and turning away his head, fired it most intrepidly in the face of the blessed sun. The blundering weapon recoiled and gave the valiant Kip an ignominious kick that laid him prostrate with uplifted heels in the bottom of the boat. But such was the effect of this tremendous fire that the wild men of the woods, struck with consternation, seized hastily upon their paddles, and shot away into one of the deep inlets of the Long Island shore. This signal victory gave new spirits to the hardy voyagers, and in honor of the achievement they gave the name of the valiant Kip to the surrounding bay, and it has continued to be called "Kip's Bay" from that time to the present."'' • He is mentioned among other contemporary historical figures such as
Peter Stuyvesant and
Adriaen van der Donck in
Edmund Clarence Stedman's 1897 poem "The Dutch Patrol" as "Hendrick Kip of the haughty lip". •
Kip's Bay on midtown Manhattan's East Side is named for his son, Hendricksen Kip, who established a house and farm there in 1655. ==References==