Photo by Lori Rothstein, 2023.
Cornelius Van Wyck (1702-1769) was part of a third generation Dutch family who played an active part in the early settling of Central Queens. He was the eldest son of Johannes Van Wyck, whose father had emigrated from Holland in 1660. In 1735, Cornelius built a home on what was then the Van Wyck family’s 125-acre farm. Today, it is one of the last remaining eighteenth-century buildings in Queens and is considered among the best examples of the period’s Dutch Colonial-style architecture. Located on the shore of Little Neck Bay in Douglaston, the Cornelius Van Wyck House was designated a historic site by the New York Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1966.
Van Wyck married Mary Hicks, and together the couple had three sons — Stephen, Cornelius II, and Gilbert. Stephen and Cornelius II were delegates for Queens County to the Continental Congress. Their third son, Gilbert, remained a loyalist during the American Revolution.
Their wood frame home was originally a three-room structure. Between 1735 and 1770, the home was expanded several times. The residence passed down to Van Wyck’s son, Stephen, and the family later sold the house to Wynant Van Zandt in 1819. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
*Cornelius Van Wyck is likely Cornelius Johannes Van Wyck. Historical records also indicate the possibility of his death being in 1759 (see citations below).
“New York SP Van Wyck, Cornelius, House,” National Archives Catalog, accessed October 8, 2025
“CORNELIUS VAN WYCK HOUSE,” New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, April 19, 1966, via Internet Archive, accessed October 8, 2025
Cornelius Johannes VanWyck (bef.1702-1769), WikiTree FREE Family Tree, accessed October 29, 2025
Cornelius Johannes van Wyck - search on ancestry.com, accessed October 9, 2025
Louis H. Schneider, “Douglaston’s Van Wyck Homestead,” Long Island Forum, September 1966, in Queens Public Library Archives, New York Landmarks Preservation Comm., Queens Co., Douglaston, Van Wyck House, in the New York Landmarks Preservation Foundation vertical file