Stained glass window

Object Number: 
1951.414c
Date: 
ca. 1656
Medium: 
Glass
Dimensions: 
Overall: 30 1/2 x 27 1/4 x 1 in. ( 77.5 x 69.2 x 2.5 cm )
Marks: 
painted: cartouche with the inscription "Cornelis woutersz hogenboom/ en machtet Cornelis de wit syn/ huysfroiu 1643" (Cornelis son of Walter Hoenboom and Cornelis DeWit his wife 1643)
Description: 
Stained glass window; oval pane painted in polychrome enamels with strapwork frame with a coat of arms consisting of a shield divided vertically into two fields with a fruit tree on the left and a crossbow on the right, surmounted by a helmet, all surrounded by foliate scrollwork, all over cartouche with the inscription "Cornelis woutersz hogenboom/ en machtet Cornelis de wit syn/ huysfroiu 1643" (Cornelis son of Walter Hoenboom and Cornelis DeWit his wife 1643); pane set in leaded glass window with rectangular panes and an oak frame with iron corner brackets.
Gallery Label: 
This is one of a small group of stained glass windows attributed to Duyckink that are thought to have been made for the First Reformed Dutch Church built in Albany, NY in 1656 and torn down in 1715. This window was removed from a house on Eighth St. in New York City and found by Mrs. Howard Robbins in a wrecker's yard and used in her Dutch Revival house at Sneden's Landing on the Hudson.
Credit Line: 
Gift of Mrs. Howard C. Robbins
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Creative: Tronvig Group