Aden Springsteen's heritage

The Springsteen Chronicles

I can say without beating my own drum that this book is a treasure.

Another Ron Springsteen

I’ve communicated with the author of The Springsteen Chronicles on and off for several years. Our ancestors Casper and Staats Springsteen were brothers who served in Butlers Rangers during the American Revolution. Their parents Symon Springsteen and Maria Seger were Ron’s great-great-great-great grandparents and my five-times-great grandparents, making Ron and me fifth cousins once removed. Although Ron is not many years older than me, Dad was Ron’s fifth cousin. Their fathers were fourth cousins, their grandfathers were third cousins, and so on. It should be noted for the record that none of these given names or surnames were spelled consistently in historical records.

How this book came to be

Ron grew up away from his father’s siblings and their families. As a result, Ron didn’t know them well. He recalls boyhood trips to see his dad’s relatives along the Mississippi River. While he enjoyed backyard stories and family connections during these visits, his grandparents, with their earlier experiences, were long gone. By the time Ron became more interested in their ancestry, his dad’s generation had also died.

I will share here, with Ron’s permission, an excerpt from the book’s prologue:

“Long after my daughters were grown and living elsewhere, my wife and I made a trip to Burlington, IA and Oquawka, IL to stir up my memories and develop a new attachment to this area my dad called “home.” It worked. I was hooked! I found this very tiny park, Mosquito Park, in the middle of Burlington up on the highest point of the bluff overlooking the mighty Mississippi River. As I stood there looking up and down the river for miles and seeing the islands where my dad roamed and hunted and lived, the dozens of boats and barges moving up and down the river and the miles and miles of fertile Illinois farmland, I began to deeply understand the attachment dad felt for this place.”

While there, Ron received a manuscript left by a departed cousin, Jane Ann Van Patten. When I communicated with Jane Ann in 1980, she knew that her great grandfather James Springsteen had been born in Upper Canada in 1826. Ron set out to learn more. Ron states in his prologue that if he had had any idea how difficult it would be or how long it would take, he might never have started. Fortunately, he did undertake this journey.

The fruit of Ron’s labors

The Springsteen Chronicles follows Ron’s family line through centuries of challenge and change for both our country and family. This is far more than a compilation of dry facts. Beginning with an exploration of life and social forces in the seventeenth-century Netherlands, Ron provides some insights on what might have led our Springsteen forbears to leave it all behind for New Amsterdam (now Manhattan) in 1652. Our Dutch surname appears to have been adopted here, probably influenced by the custom of new English rule. Most people in the Netherlands at that time were known by patronymic names, e.g., Johannes Casperse (the son of Casper) and his father Casper Josephs (the son of Joseph).

Ron follows early generations in the settlement of Long Island and the lower Hudson River valley, weaving the family into the context of colonial life and places like the Sleepy Hollow church. Our family line found their way upriver to Albany and Schenectady while another line wandered south to the Carolinas where they shortened their name to Springs.

Ron describes social and political forces in the colonies, especially British New York, even as Dutch tradition remained strong along the Hudson for more than a century. We learn how divisions born in the French and Indian War set neighbors and even family members against each other.

While Ron’s research is not finished, he took the time and effort to compile this book. It bears some of the wrinkles of self-editing and rearrangement, but he brought it into the light of day. Ron has travelled to the Netherlands, New York, and Ontario among other places, working with archivists and discovering new sources. In addition to providing many family charts and a substantial bibliography, Ron states that he is reachable for questions about sources at rcspringsteen@gmail.com. While you’re at it, you might ask if he still has copies of The Springsteen Chronicles available for purchase. Unless your interest is narrowly focused, I don’t think you would be disappointed.

6 Comments

    • Ron

      Melisa, you can contact the author at mailto:rcspringsteen@gmail.com. Enjoy your copy of the book!

      I’m curious about your Springsteen line. If you wish to share information, you can contact me through my Welcome page. I have an extensive tree on Ancestry and limited trees on other DNA testing platforms.

      Ron

  • Crystal Springsteen Stowell

    Hello, I am a Springsteen and would love to read this book! How can I purchase or get a copy of this book.

    Thank you!

  • Jennifer

    Hi Ron: I’m decended from Bernice Lavelle Springstead (maternal side great grandpa) in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. My mom remembers Springstead family reunions attended by some family dressed as amish/old order Mennonite which led her to believe we were decended from Pennsylvania Dutch. When I search online geneology resources, I see Springstead leading back to Springsteen, but no reference to Pennsylvania Dutch that I can tell. I’d really appreciate any insight you are able to share. I have sent an email request to purchase The Springsteen Chronicles.

    Thanks very much.

    • Ron

      Jennifer, the first several chapters of Ron’s book should be of interest to you in getting a feel for your potential ancestry. More than half of the book discusses my ancestors and their brothers, sisters and cousins. I found the whole book to be quite interesting. I hope you enjoy it.

      Springstead, Springsteen, Springsteel, Springston and other variants seem to have interchanged as surnames quite a bit before settling on one surname in a family line. I can’t say that they all originated from the Springsteen immigrants of 1652, but any of these family lines from New York and present-day Ontario should consider a likelihood that their ancestors were originally Springsteens.

      Thanks for sharing your mother’s recollection that family reunions were attended by some of the plain folk. Many Mennonite families have moved to the area around my hometown of Sheridan, Michigan since I grew up there. I’m not aware of any Amish or Mennonite ancestors but they have been present in communities where ancestors lived. My brother used to call me Graber because I was inclined to use old-fashioned tools that worked rather than jumping on every new effort-saving tool that came along.

      I am interested in any and all variant family lines related to Springsteen ancestry. Who were your Springstead ancestors around Hamilton? Author Ron Springsteen’s family lived not far from there for at least a couple of generations.

      You are welcome to contact me by email, which you can find in the first paragraph of my Welcome page.

      Ron

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