30 Staten Island Association of Arts and Sciences 



Mr. Tompkins left surviving him his widow Hannah, and the 

 following named persons as his only named heirs at law : 



1. Griff en Tompkins. 



2. Arietta Minthorne, wife of Gilbert L. Thompson. 



3. Hannah E., wife of Dr. John S. Westervelt. 



4. Sarah A., who married Archibald Gordon. 



5. Minthorne Tompkins. 



6. Daniel H. Tompkins. 



7. Susannah M., who married Richard Smith. 



8. Ray Tompkins. 



Upon the award of the arbitrator before mentioned, Gilbert L. 

 Thompson obtained judgment against the administrators of the 

 estate of Daniel D. Tompkins on March 15, 1828, for $16,539.92 

 debt and $3,250 damages and costs. (N. Y. County Clerks Judg- 

 ment Docket.) 



The judgment obtained by Mangle Minthorne was, at the 

 instance of the executors of his will, received by scire facias on 

 the 12th day of August, 1829, against the heirs and terre-tenants 

 of Daniel D. Tompkins, and a writ of testatum fieri facias, dated 

 the 15th of the same month, was directed to the sheriff of Rich- 

 mond County, commanding him to sell all the north glebe, except 

 a few small parcels sold by Mr. Tompkins., The sale under this 

 execution was from time to time adjourned, until Gilbert L. 

 Thompson procured an injunction restraining the sheriff from 

 selling the site of the Marble House. On Jan. 4, 1830, the sheriff 

 sold the land described in the execution, except the said site, to 

 Charles C. Young. Stephen Cleveland, as the assignee of a junior 

 judgment, redeemed the land so sold and received from the sheriff 

 a deed bearing date April 5, 1831 (T Deeds, 182 ; V Deeds, 482), 

 which however, expressly excepted the site covered by the injunc- 

 tion, by the following description, namely: 



" All that certain piece or parcel of land with the building 

 thereon, now occupied and claimed by Gilbert Livingston Thomp- 

 son, which piece or parcel or land is bounded on the north by 

 Livingston Street as laid down on the map of the lands of the 

 late Daniel D. Tompkins known as the boundary lines between 



