Stephen De Lancey | |
Office: | Member of the General Assembly of Nova Scotia for the Town of Annapolis |
Term Start: | 1784 |
Term End: | 1786 |
Predecessor: | Obadiah Wheelock |
Successor: | James De Lancey |
Birth Date: | December 1738 |
Birth Place: | West Farms, Province of New York, British America |
Death Place: | Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Parents: | Peter DeLancey Elizabeth Colden |
Spouse: | Esther Rynderts |
Children: | 3 |
Relations: | James De Lancey (brother) Alice De Lancey Izard (sister) Thomas Barclay (brother-in-law) James De Lancey (uncle) Etienne de Lancey (grandfather) Cadwallader Colden (grandfather) |
Stephen De Lancey[1] (December 1738 - May 1809) was a lawyer and political figure in New York state and Nova Scotia. He represented Annapolis Township in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1784 to 1789.[2]
He was born in West Farms, New York, the eldest son of Peter DeLancey (1705–1770) and Elizabeth (née Colden) DeLancey. His sister, Susan DeLancey (1754–1837), was married to Thomas Henry Barclay (1753–1830), a lawyer who became one of the United Empire Loyalists in Nova Scotia and served in the colony's government.[3]
His paternal grandparents were Etienne de Lancey and Anne van Cortlandt (1676–1724), herself the third child of Gertrude Schuyler (born 1654) and Stephanus van Cortlandt (1643–1700), the Chief Justice of the Province of New York.[4] Both his uncle, James DeLancey (1703–1760), and maternal grandfather, Cadwallader Colden (1688–1776), served as Colonial Governors of New York.[5]
He studied law and later moved to Albany. From 1765 to 1766, he served as clerk for the city and county of Albany. In 1770, he was named a masters in the provincial chancery court. He was elected to the Albany committee of correspondence in 1775.[6]
In 1776, because of his loyalist sympathies, he was stripped of his posts and deported to Hartford, Connecticut.[7] In 1783, he moved to Nova Scotia with his family. He was first elected to the provincial assembly in a by-election held in 1783, taking the seat on Nov. 16, 1784, and was elected again in 1785. There is a website[8] claiming that in 1786, he was named to the province's Council, however he does not appear in a list of their members. A more reliable source[2] reports that he was appointed to office in the Bahamas, and his seat was declared vacant April 6, 1789. His brother James won a by-election to replace him in the provincial assembly, and he took the seat on Feb. 26, 1790.[2] James was indeed named a member of the Council on June 6, 1794, and this may be the source of confusion.
De Lancey was married to Esther Rynderts of Albany.[6] [9] [10] Together, they were the parents of three children:[11]
De Lancey died in Annapolis at the age of 70.[8]