Volkert Petrus Douw was a merchant and politician from Albany, New York who was prominent both during colonial times and after the United States was established.
Early life
Douw was born on March 23, 1720 in Albany, New York. He was the only surviving son of nine children born to Petrus Douw, of an old Dutch family, and Anna Douw. His siblings included Magdalena Douw, who married Harmen Gansevoort, Maria Douw, who married Johannes Gansevoort, and Rachel Douw. His maternal grandparents were Hendrick van Rensselaer, director of Fort Crailo, the Eastern patent of the Rensselaerswyck manor, and Catharina Van Brugh, herself the daughter of merchant Johannes Pieterse Van Brugh and sister of Pieter Van Brugh, mayor of Albany from 1699 to 1700 and again from 1721 to 1723. Through his sister Maria, he was uncle to Brig. Gen. Peter Gansevoort and State Senator and AssemblymenLeonard Gansevoort.
On May 20, 1742, Douw was married to Anna De Peyster, the daughter of Johannes de Peyster III, who also served as mayor of Albany. They built a home in the country known as Wolvenhook, located on the eastern bank of the Hudson River, about a mile below Albany. Together, they were the parents of nine children, including:
Anna Douw, who married Dirck Ten Broeck, son of Mayor Dirck Ten Broeck, in 1761.
Maria Douw, who married her cousin, John De Peyster Ten Eyck, the son of Tobias Coenraedt Ten Eyck, in 1782.
He was a lifelong friend of General Philip Schuyler, and after his death it was said of him that he was "a true patriot; in civil and domestic relations, he was considered a pattern, and no man in Albany died more regretted." He was described as:
He was tall and dignified, standing six feet two inches, as straight as an arrow; said by some to be handsome. He had a clean-shaven face, exposing a firm mouth and piercing eyes. He wore his hair in peculiar fashion, probably common to others of his standing in those times, tied in a queue, with his front hair brushed back in severe lines and powdered. He usually wore a longwaisted coat, the skirts reaching nearly to his ankles, which was adorned with large silver buttons made from Spanish coins. Knee breeches, silk stockings, and shoes with silver buckles shining, these set with rhinestones, heightened the general effect; but more prominent than these was his cocked hat. He carried a silver-headed cane, and bore a turnipshaped, silver watch, from which hung a heavy seal, while his tobacco or snuff-box was engraved with initials and coat-of-arms.
Through his son John, who was close friends with the Marquis de Lafayette, he was the grandfather of Volckert Peter Douw, Anna De Peyster Douw Cuyler, Margaret Livingston Douw Abbe, John De Peyster Douw, Catharine Louisa Douw Townsend, and Harriet Maria Douw Johnson. Through his daughter Magdalena, he was the grandfather of James Stevenson, who also served as mayor of Albany from 1826 to 1828.