Hampstead. Haverftraw. ORANGE into viz. Blooming. Grove. And that all that part of the said county of Rockland bounded easterly by Clarks-Town and Orange-Town, southerly by Orange-Town and New-Jersey, westerly by NewJersey and Orange county, and northerly by a line running from the northwest corner of Clarks-Town along the south bounds of the lands of Francis Gurnie and Benjamin Coe, and along the south bounds of the land of Ga briel Concklin, and the same course continued to the bounds of Orange county, shall be and continue a town by the name of Hampstead. And that all that part of the said county of Rockland bounded southerly by Hampstead and Clarks-Town, and easterly, northerly and westerly by the bounds of the coun ty, shall be and continue a town by the name of Haver straw. And that all that part of the county of Orange begineleven towns, ning in the south bounds of the town of New-Windsor at the northeast corner of a tract of land commonly called Van Dam's patent, and then along the east bounds of the said patent to the southeast corner thereof, thence southeast until it comes to the top of Schonamonk mountain, thence southwesterly along the top of said mountain to the line commonly called the new northwest line, thence northwest along said line to the division line between the patent of Wawayanda and Cheescocks, thence along the said line to the town of Warwick, thence northwardly along the line of the towns of Warwick and Goshen to the line of the town of Wallkill, and thence east along the said line and the line of the town of New-Windsor to the place of beginning, shall be and continue a town by the name of Blooming-Grove. Cheefcocks. Cornwall. Gofhen. And that all that part of the said county of Orange beginning in the east line of the town of Warwick, at the southerly corner of the town of Blooming-Grove, and thence southerly along the said line of the town of Warwick to the line of the state of New-Jersey, thence along the said line to the county of Rockland, thence along the said county of Rockland to the mouth of Poplopen's kill on the west side of Hudson's river, thence a direct line to the southeast corner of the town of Blooming-Grove, and thence along the same to the place of beginning, shall be and continue a town by the name of Cheescocks. And that all that part of the said county of Orange bounded northerly by New-Windsor, westerly by Cheescocks and Blooming-Grove, southerly by Cheescocks and the bounds of the county, and easterly by the middle of Hudson's river, shall be and continue a town by the name of Cornwall. And that all that part of the said county of Orange bounded easterly by Blooming Grove, northerly by the town of Wallkill, westerly by the middle of the Wall " kill, and southerly by the creek commonly called Quaker's creek from where it falls into the Wallkill on the southwesterly side of the great island in the drowned lands to the road leading across the grist-mill dam of William Thompson, esquire, thence along the southerly side of the said road running towards Sugar-loaf mountain to the northerly line of the plantation late of Samuel Rayner deceased, and thence along said line easterly. to the southwest corner of a large tract of land commonly called Rutgers' tract, and thence easterly along the south bounds of the said tract to the foot of the said Sugar-loaf mountain, and then an east course to the bounds of Blooming-Grove, shall be and continue a town by the name of Goshen. And that all that part of the said county of Orange Warwick. bounded easterly by Cheescocks and Blooming-Grove, southerly by the state of New-Jersey, westerly by the middle of the Wallkill, and northerly by Goshen, shall be and continue a town by the name of Warwick. And that all that part of the said county of Orange Minifik. bounded easterly by the middle of the Wallkill, southerly by New-Jersey, westerly by Delaware-river, and northerly by the towns of Wallkill and Deerpark, shall be and continue a town by the name of Minisink. And that all that/part of the said county of Orange New-Windfor bounded easterly by the middle of Hudson's river, southerly by an east and/west line from the mouth of Murderer's creek, and westerly and northerly by a line beginning at the west side of Hudson's river at the mouth of Quasick-creek, and funning from thence along the south bounds of a tract of land commonly called German par tent and the southerly bounds of a tract of land granted to Alexander Baird and company to the east bounds of two thousand acres of land granted to Cadwallader Colden, and then across the same to the most northerly corner of the land granted to Patrick Hume, and thence along the westerly bounds thereof to the lands granted to Patrick McKnight, and then along the same southeasterly and southwesterly to the southerly corner thereof, and then continuing the last mentioned line to the town of Blooming-Grove so as to include the lands formerly of Fletcher Matthew, shall be and continue a town by the name of New-Windsor. And that all that part of the said county of Orange Newburgh. bounded easterly by the middle of Hudson's river, southerly by New-Windsor, westerly by the east bounds of the tract of land granted to Cadwallader Colden and the east bounds of one thousand acres of land granted to John Johnson, and the east bounds of three thousand acres of land granted to Henry Wileman, and the east bounds of three thousand five hundred acres of land granted to Rip Wallkill. Montgomery. Deerpark. ULSTER County into Van Dam and thers, and northerly by a line ginning on the west side o Hudson's river at the northeast corner of a tract of land granted to Francis Harrison and company, called the five thousand acré tract, and running from thence east to the middle of Hudson's river, and westerly along the north bounds of the said tract and the north bounds of another tract granted to the said Francis Harrison to the tract of land commonly called Wallace's tract, then along the lines of the same northerly and westerly to the northeasterly bounds of a tract of land granted to Jacobus Kip, John' Cruger and others, commonly called Kip and Cruger's tract, then westerly along the northeasterly and northerly bounds thereof to the northwest corner thereof, and then westerly to the northeast corner of the said tract of three thousand five hundred acres of land granted to Rip Van Dam and others shall be and continue a town by the name of Newburgh And that all that part of the said county of Orange bounded easterly by New-Windsor, southerly by a west line from the mouth of Murderer's creek, westerly by Shawangunk-kill, and northerly by thee commonly called the old northwest line, shall be and continue a town by the name of WallkiN. awangunk-kill, ortheast corner anted to Henry north bounds And that all that part of the said coty of Orange bounded easterly by New-Windsor and Nwburgh, southerly by the town of Wallkill, westerly by and northerly by a line beginning at the of a tract of three thousand acres of land Wileman, and runnning thence along thereof to the Paltz-river, commonly cad the Wallkill, and then southerly up the same river the southwest corner of a tract of four thousand acres of land granted to Gerardus Beekman and others, and then westerly and northerly along the southerly and westerly bounds thereof to the northwest corner thereof, and then northwesterly along the north bounds of the lands granted to Jeremiah Schuyler and company to the Shawangank-kill aforesaid, shall be and continue a town by the name of Montgomery. And that all that part of the said county of Orange beginning on the Shawangunk-kill at the southwest corner of the town of Wallkill, and running thence along the said kill, being the boundary line of the said town of Wallkill, to the north part of the farm now or lately occupied by Joseph Wood junior, thence west to the river Mongaap, thence along the said river Mongaap as it runs to the Delaware-river, then along the said river to the town of Minisink, and thence along the northern boundary of the said town of Minisink to the place of beginning, shall be and continue a town by the name of Deerpark. And that all that part of the county of Ulster bounded 12 towns, viz. easterly by the middle of Hudson's river, southerly by Orange punty, westerly by a line begi ng on the line Marlborough. of the said county of Orange two chairs and seventy-five links east of the north corner of a tracy of land called the Five-Patentees, from thence on a straight line northward to the most easterly bounds of Robert Tift's land where it joins the town of New-Paltz, and northerly by a tract of land granted to Lewis Dubois and partners, called the New-Paltz patent, shall be and continue a town by the name of Mariborough. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster Platte-Kili. bounded easterly by Marlborough, southerly by Orange county, westerly by the east bounds of two thousand acres of land granted to Peter Barberie, and the east bounds of two thousand acres of land granted to William Huddleston, and the east bounds of two thousand acres of land granted to Thomas Garland, and northerly by a tract of land granted to Lewis Dubois and partners, called the New-Paltz patent, and a tract of land granted to Noah Elting and Nathaniel La Fever, and a tract of land granted to Anna Mullender, commonly called Mullender's tract, and a tract of land granted to Hugh Freer, and the southerly line thereof continued to the east bounds of the said two thousand res of land granted to the said Thomas Garland, shale and continue a town by the name of Platte-Kill. And that alat part of the said county of Ulster Shawangunk bounded easte by Orange county and the town of Platte-Kill, sourly by Orange county, westerly by the Platte-Kill-river nd the east foot of the Shawangunk mountains, and orther by a line beginning at the northeast corner of a tract of two thousand acres of land granted to William Huddleston, and running from thence along the north bounds thereof and the north bounds of two thousand acres of land granted to Peter Matthews and others to the month of Shawangunk-kill, and then westerly along the north side of the same kill as it runs to the southwest corner of the land granted to colonel Jacob Rutsen, and the long the westerly bounds thereof to the northwest corner thereof, and then along the southerly bounds of a tract of land granted to Stephen Dubois to the southwest corner thereof, and then northwest to Shawangunk mountains aforesaid, shall be and continue a town by the name of Shawangunk. And that all at part of the said county of Ulster Kingston. called the township of Kingston and manor of Fox-Hall, and extending /northward to the line of the county of Greene, and sout ward to the north bounds of a tract of land granted to Lewis Dubois and partners, called the New-Paltz patent and east to the middle of Hudson's river, shall be and continue a town by the name of King ston. Hurley Marbletown. New Paltz. Woodstock. Mamakating. Lumberland. Rochefter. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster called the township of Hurley, including all that certain tract of land formerly comprehended within the bounds of the great or Hardenbergh's patent, and released by Margaret Livingston lately deceased to the inhabitants of Hurley, and also all that tract of land beginning in the northwest corner of the New-Paltz patent and running thence south fifty degrees east one hundred and eighteen chains to the east bank of the Wallkill, thence north seventy-one degrees and twenty minutes east one hundred and fifty four chains to where the east bounds of the said township of Hurley intersects the north bounds of NewPaltz, and thence northwesterly along the bounds of the New-Paltz patent to the place of beginning, shall be and continue a town by the name of Hurley. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster called Marbletown, shall be and continue a town by the name of Marbletown. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster bounded northerly by Kingston and Hurley, easterly by the middle of Hudson's river, southerly by Marlborough, Platte-Kill and Shawangunk, and westerly by the west bounds of the New-Paltz patent continued southerly to the northwest corner of Shawangunk, shall be and continue a town by the name of New-Paltz. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster bounded southerly by the towns of Nevisink, Rochester, Marbletown and Hurley, easterly by Marbletown, Hurley and Kingston, northerly by the bounds of the county, and westerly by the bounds of the county, shall be and continue a town by the name of Woodstock. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster bounded westerly by Mongaap-river, northeasterly by the towns of Nevisink and Rochester, easterly by the town of Shawangunk and the county of Orange, and southerly by the county of Orange, shall be and continue a town by the name of Mamakating. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster bounded southwesterly and northwesterly by the bounds. of the county, northeasterly by the town of Nevisink, and easterly by the town of Mamakating, shall be and continue a town by the name of Lumberland. And that all that part of the said county of Ulster bounded southeasterly by the towns of Shawangunk and New-Paltz, southwesterly by a line running from the southerly corner of the patent of Rochester where it meets with the northwesterly bounds of the town of Shawangunk at the Shawangunk mountains north forty-nine degrees and thirty minutes west a distance of twelve miles and an half, northwesterly by a line running from thence north forty degrees east till it intersects a line continued north |